| UMiami, USC, Tulane? Yes, yes, yes. |
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Whichever yields a happy kid. |
It is a rich kids school after all. |
| Kids' best fit schools at whatever price are covered by their 529 plans. |
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If rich can afford it, it's "worth" it. If it was affordable at $200,000/year, would be "worth" it.
As a practical matter, paying $91,000 for only 5 classes per semester seems steep. High schools spend $19,000 per student. Even if universities spent triple the salaries, that would be $57,000/year. Plus public schools don't have endowments. I guess universities spend big bucks on other things, esthetics, events, speakers, research. |
The Ivy League is a sports conference. There is a wide variance of school type and quality within the conference; treating them as a single entity is weak thinking. |
the full pays subsidize the tuition for those receiving financial aid |
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Yes. We went through the shock last year. We had pay for this, not this blah blah
And after our kid got into an Ivy and we did the tour and all of the admitted student days, we are now paying the $90k for the Ivy. It was fit. |
So many kids in this gen don’t drink at all. Mine doesn’t and if he were a parties probably the last place ode wand him is a big alcoholic frat party football school |
Anywhere they want to go. My kids will have 10's of millions by their 40's. Expensive college is just giving money a bit early. |
High schools have limited offerings and of course you can't really major in anything. They also don't need endowments because they are provided all the funding that has been agreed for the upcoming current school year. That said, many public schools in wealthy areas have outside PTA-type organizations that raise a decent amount of $$$s. If college basically only offered Math, Western History, English and General Science (i.e., no real depth in any of the sciences like HS)...with a narrow smattering of electives...then yes, one would think they would spend a ton less and cost less. Finally, many high schools have fairly small physical plants. You do see some private schools with sprawling campuses like college...but they are private. Of course, those private / boarding schools, no surprise, charge anywhere from $60k - $90k per year. |
Except we are about to enter a bear market and a recession. |
If you are UMC your hypothesis has been empirically proven to be not true[see Chetty]. HYPSM will provide a slightly higher chance of making it to the 1% so it is like buying a lottery ticket. |
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This is why a lot of people are sending their kids overseas. St. Andrews Scotland is approx 30K/year. LSE is about 28K. National University of Singapore is 10-30K depending on what course is chosen. That's a lot less than 90K and those universities have placements/name recognition on par with Tufts, I would say. YMMV.
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