NP. Guess I'm insane. I would easily pay OOS tuition for UNC or UCLA over full ride UMD or Rutgers if that would make my kid happier. UMD is just blah, and Rutgers has a very disjointed campus. The percentage of kids at those schools who would have liked to attend a different school seems very high. |
| Can you do full pay OOS without it being a stretch? If so, I would go to UNC. UCLA does not appeal to me at all. If you cant swing UNC without loan then UMDCP full ride. Honestly I think UMD may have better internship availability for public health and you are closer to multiple hospital systems, pharma companies on the 270 stretch, and government agencies in DC. I would rather go to UNC undergrad than UMDCP. |
| Take Rutgers off the table. No point in even considering it. |
This is about Rutgers. Why UMD talk? |
Who cares if it appeals to you. How about DC? |
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OP here - as of right now, DC preference is UNC for its #2 ranking in global health for undergraduate and its closeness to home in east coast.
Secretly I think DC wants to go to UCLA for its weather, campus, school spirit but know the global health program isn’t as robust as UNC. UMD full ride is the next option, not super excited about it. Financially, we have money for out of state/private university, but it will mean if DC goes to graduate school, it will be less money from us. |
| UMD would be the smarter and more financially sound move but if you can swing it, UNC can’t be beat for the Chapel Hill experience. Congrats on these great options, your kid must have worked really hard! |
I understand the appeal of UCLA -- I'm originally from SoCal and had friends there, and their kids are there now. But, strictly from a financial perspective, if your kid is planning to go to grad school, UCLA doesn't make any sense. I would go with UMD for the full ride and save the $$ for graduate school. Your kid is 18 and while they are clearly smart, they cannot see the forest for the trees, and what loans for graduate school will mean for their future. If they spend less on undergrad, that will mean more money not just for graduate school, but a new car, trips, shopping, etc.. My DD will have to think about this situation, too - more expensive oos means less money for graduate school, and living on the cheap. Cheaper undergrad means money for grad school, and more spending money. |
+100. Good move not to pay UMICH OOS $70,000 |
Totally agree. Do a socal graduation trip to scratch the itch of socal and then go to umd? |