| Keep chewing those grapes. |
Yuck. If you are any indication of the type of families that apply to this school, I will make sure my kids aren't interested in it. And I don't think you need to apologize to the PP. You just proved her point. |
| NP. You’ll “make sure your kids aren’t interested in it”? You don’t sound like a controlling helicopter at all. |
Tuition+room and board about $300k assuming your child graduates in 4 years. NOT to mention travel expenses to and from Vermont. I don't think ANY private school is worth sticker price. I bet they would give you SOMETHING. Say they gave 30%....your down to cost of out of state at a public school. |
I'm the one who wrote the bolded. Not privileged (maybe we need to define that?) but I have the old fashioned belief that the purpose of going to college is to get a good education. DC wants to major in Classics. Fine, the return on investment is going to be poor I'm sure, but I'm not going to refuse to pay because of that choice. |
This is a bizarre statement. Middlebury does not give any merit scholarships. It does award need-based aid for families who qualify. Absent extraordinary circumstances, a family with a HHI of $300K will not qualify for need-based aid. Therefore, they would pay full freight or not send their child there. Middlebury would not "give (them) SOMETHING." |
DC should try Oxford or some other strong college overseas. |
Why? There are plenty of good universities in the U.S. with strong programs in this field. DC is at one of them. |
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Canadian Border Answer:
You laugh now but if you watch Handmaid's Tale, you will see the value of being 1.5 hours from the Canadian border. When my kid goes there, we will not need our underground bunker anymore. We will just evacuate to her dorm and the rest of you suckers will be here in the Apocalypse. |
For the cost of full freight at M you can get much more value overseas, plus a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I wouldn't do it for a heavy STEM subject, but for Classics there's amazing and cheaper options in Canada and the UK, for example. |
Yeah, I think you do need a definition on privilege. 99% of the country can't afford to just sent their kid to $70K a year school for an education, let alone be in a position to just let their kid go wherever they want, pick whatever degree seems fun, and basically do whatever they want with Mommy and Daddy's money. And then there are people who actually can afford it and laugh at a teen who says they want them to spend $300K to major in classics. They are the ones who won't let their kids inherit a dime, unless they make something of themselves. You know, accountability, independence, etc... |
And then there’s us just laughing at how angry and stupid you are. It’s hilarious. |
Not sure which poster you're talking to, but I don't think majoring in Classics is stupid. Depends on the school I guess and what the student wants to do afterwards. |
Nor do I. |
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A friend's child is majoring in classics and will probably go to grad school for something like computational linguistics. Believe it or not, people who write translation software actually benefit from knowing other languages, and knowing a lot about various issues with grammar, etc.
As a poster upthread said, while some people believe you should major in pharmaceutical repping and become a pharmaceutical rep, there are actually many liberal arts majors that are useful background for going on in a vareity of fields. For example, some people who now do intellectual property rights law actually majored in philosophy, where there is a lot of writing about ownership and how one claims ownership and what it means to own something, etc. |