Ok. But some prefer going to a big school with a gorgeous campus and lots of sports/activities in a warm climate. |
First…most of the families at Bama are from OOS, so of course your premise is flawed. But it’s easy enough for you to look at the matriculations from top Alabama private schools and see most (like 85%) of the kids go to school OOS and most to private colleges. I work with one of the richest people in Alabama and his kids go to Vanderbilt and Princeton. You don’t actually appear to know anyone in the south. |
It's probably just the same handful of people posting just to get a reaction. |
Iowa, Iowa State, Oregon, Oregon State, South Carolina…my kid received enough from UGA that would bring the cost below what PP was paying to Alabama and that was just normal merit aid, not some special honors college scholarship…lsu…I could go on. NC State is another that gave my kid merit to bring it lower than what PP is paying for Alabama. If you spend anytime researching you will find these and many other schools award lots of merit to any kid with decent stats. Again, PP wasn’t getting a full ride…just enough to bring total cost down to $30k/year. |
Well let me give you another data point so your views are balanced. Our kid who was a NMSF/NMF turned it down over our instate flagship. No way sending my kid down there. We are not even white. |
Yes, but there are different types of students who go there. The ones who are going for the full ride may find that the environment is not the place where they want to spend their four years. Other kids are going for a different reasons and they love it there. My kid could’ve gotten a hefty scholarship for merit, but felt that the school was not a good fit and chose to go elsewhere. |
| Alabama isn't a good school, but that doesn't really matter if you get a hot wife and want to live in the South. They are a very fun, beautiful school and your frat brothers will get you a good job. |
I know two girls who went there on full rides. One from VA and one from Long Island. Both are what DCUM would consider middle class. They both love it and seem to have drank the kool aid. |
To be in the top 1% of earners in Alabama, you would need an annual income of approximately $577,017 as of September 2025, according to a recent study cited by Yahoo Finance. Sorry, but $577k is DCUM middle class. |
it is one bama booster. |
| The rankings system does not measure the things kids or families use to make decisions. |
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Bama is a perfectly fine school. You aren't going to get a worse education compared to most flagship universities. It will be up to the student to make the most of it.
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| Alabama doesn’t play the USNWR game. Their admission rates are high, and as a result retention low. Scholarships are public and the same standards for everyone. Professor to student ratio is less favorable because they let their professors focus on research and teach fewer classes than higher ranked schools (e.g., Yale requires profs teach 4 classes a semester, Alabama requires 1). Professors can avoid teaching lower level classes. The prestige of the faculty at Alabama way outweighs the general student body. They pay professors very well and research funding is high. Their research is excellent and their grad programs ranked high - med and increasingly law. It is undeniable the opportunities for motivated and academic kids at the school. Upper level classes are fantastic and rigorous and small. Med, grad and job placement is notably high among the program kids. For people focused on “rankings” or social prestige, probably not a good fit. |
High levels of merit aid for academically qualified kids. Especially if your kid is planning on graduate school (where they can chase a "name"), getting through undergrad for less money is a huge draw. There is a good honors college, and a motivated kid can get a good education there. Is it Harvard? No. But it's not a clown college either, and it's not like they lock you in the state after graduation. |
But this means kids and parents are just incredibly lazy in looking at schools. LSU, Oregon, Iowa, Iowa State, South Carolina..the list is actually fairly extensive...they all give high levels of merit for academically qualified kids. |