And if your UMC child had decent grades and test scores, he/she would receive a merit scholarship to one of the hundreds of 4-year institutions which offer them. The academic quality of faculty and peers at a CC cannot compare. Please don't delude yourself. |
+1. Same- my husband went to NoVa for 2 years and transferred to GMU. He graduated GMU worked for a bit and started a business making over 200k. The college you go to does not necessarily equate to success. It’s how motivated and how hard you are willing to work that matters. Do what’s right for your child and what’s within your financial means. I promise you that success stories can come from either route- a community college or a 4 year college or both. |
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I'm sorry but this is an elitist, entitled question that seems moronic to me. I went to NVCC for two years and then GMU for two years, both had quality instruction.
I not only would "send my child to Nova" but I would congratulate them for making a sensible choice regardless of their IQ or potential or HS performance. |
So this is a sensible choice for everyone? You do know there’s more to the CC choice than just the quality of the education. It’s an entirely different, and in my view not so great, experience. I get the financial argument for CC but to pretend that there isn’t a significant trade-off is absurd. |
Depends on the classes. If you are taking lots of sciences (and labs) hoping to transfer to a premed track, scoring an A requires a lot of studying. |
My DH did the same (NOVA to GMU). He is in sales (where it doesn't really matter much where you went to college). |
Look, it all depends on the amount of merit scholarship. Not everyone is Upper Middle class making 250.000 or more. Lots of people make around 100.000 per household and do not qualify for aid, especially if they are educated and not a minority. Besides, decent grades do not mean much and unless the student is in the highest 5% of the group with an SAT higher than 1500, the parents have to come up with a minimum of $50.000 per year (In addition to merit scholarships) which is quite tough for people who are right above the poverty level. |
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If community college was right for him, I would be very glad we had such a good one nearby.
As it is, we have the means and he has the grades to go somewhere more selective. |
1. You can get merit aid with stats less than that, although where you get the aid will vary. However, I certainly agree with you that families still have to come up with a lot of money because what the school thinks you can contribute and what you think you can contribute will not be the same. 2. My son's college will definitely come in below $50k (he had two good schools that were going to come in around $35-$40k) -- all merit aid, and he is going somewhere cheaper than engineering at UVA instate before transportation. We can come up with that, but it is absolutely true that many families cannot. (I wouldn't choose engineering at UVA for my kid, but YMMV). |
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While I can't comment on NOVA, I can comment on another community college. My nephew and his group of 5 friends all went the community college route and then transferred to either U of Md College Park, Towson or Univ of Balt. and they all have done real well, coming out with great jobs. They all stay focused and still graduated within 4 years. And they lived in an apartment together during the entire 4 years together so some commuted to school. It can be done but you have to have a focused child and be proactive to know what will transfer and what won't. I'll admit none of them did engineering or pre med or pre law or accounting but the world is made up of other professions. One works at a top DC real estate management company, one at a defense contractor, one for Coca-Cola, one at a hospital (non-medical job) and other at NASA. They are under 30 and all have their own homes, newish cars, maybe even a kid and wife. But they kept each other motivated and on the task at hand. They could have gone straight to a 4 year school but cost was an issue.
So don't dismiss community college. It works for some. I think that if you want to be a nurse, then community college is the way to go and probably some other professions. |
It's not that she scored low, it's that she didn't get 800 on the SAT II subject matter tests. More in the 750s. Ivies want to see 800s on at least two subject matter II tests. |
NVCC is an xlnt option providing you research it and follow all the prescriptions the PP above lays out. It's a terrific program yet I have never met a single family/kid who has done it successfully and transferred into UVA (live inNoVA). But someone must do it because UVA takes some 800 students every year from the NVCC schools in VA. We're 1:03, the family who had the awful professor for a summer science course. |
| I would not entirely rule it out, but have some reservations, solely because my child wants to get his degree in Electrical Engineering, and (unless something goes wrong) will have already completed AP calculus in high school. For that particular degree, I think it could be better to start out at a 4-year college to ensure that the correct pre-requisites are covered. |
+1 |
| No, because I want my child to have a more traditional college experience living on campus and experiencing living away from home. We did a prepaid college plan to make sure we could at least do a state school. If that is the only option, its a great choice, but not my personal preference when we can save and make at least a state college happen. |