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Reply to "Final UK undergrad ranking is out as if last night (The Times)"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]In that case, lets say your kid gets in one of the schools you mentioned, Stanford, MIT or Wharton but no financial aid or very little. How are you going to justify a $80k+ vs £9.3k?[/quote] That is a tough one. For us UK citizens, outside of Oxbridge is a full pay degree from Stanford/MIT/Wharton worth $300k more than a degree from Durham, St. Andrews or Warwick? As a Brit, I personally do not think so. But lets see what happens.[/quote] My kid was accepted to Brown ED. Zero aid. He is going to St Andrews.[/quote] Breaking the ED contract? Why apply ED the? Hugely unethical. [/quote] Please stop. ED only apply in the US….go ahead and let the school sue….will never happen….[/quote] That’s actually not true. My DC ended up not applying to Oxford for that reason. [/quote] That was your choice. The US system and its “college counselors“ brainwash parents and scare them to death about turning down a ED offer for a foreign offer when there is ZERO impact to the US college. They are notified immediately on most cases I know, it is not like there is this one spot now lost in a vacum…please. In our case, we were in the fine line between getting some need based aid and not. Not wealthy enough to easily afford full pay and income not low enough to qualify for need based aid. So the decision was mainly financial. [/quote] Yes, it was our (ethnical) choice. This is not about being scared but about breaking an agreement. My DC is in a private school, and there is no way the college counselor would have been on board with applying ED domestically while keeping UK options. In fact, going back on ED agreement is bad for future applicants for the high school. And we thought it would set a wrong example for DC in being so selfish. [/quote]
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