| I would be happy that my kid chose the cheaper option... |
+1 Go gators!!! I loved my southern SEC college experience and wouldn't trade that for all the Ivy League schools in the world. |
But why? Is it because kids apply to more schools? The Baby Boomers were a huge group back in the 70s going through the process. |
More kids filing more applications. Thanks to the Common App a kid can now file 8-12 applications, so long as you're willing to lay out $80 per app. |
Way more kids go to college these days. A lot more. Fewer kids going straight to work from high school which used to be a viable option thirty years ago when we had manufacturing and more trades. |
But then why is the yield to a lot of the top non-ivy 35-40%? It means they must be applying and getting into a lot of schools. |
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Um, yeah. I am proud of him every day. He is a lovely young man.
He is better than me at some things, and I better than him at others. |
| I am secured enough to get that an ivy is not the be all and end all. Some ivy grads do fantastic and end up as captains of industry/academics etc, most ivy grads do fine career wise, and some end up struggling. Guess what -- same is true for grads of every state school too. Going to PSU won't "prevent" you from doing anything. -Holder of 2 ivy degrees |
I don't understand. Why apply to an Ivy if she preferred the University of Florida? |