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College and University Discussion
Reply to "College enrollment down "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]10:10 again. It also feels like I'm being overly critical. All these schools offered interesting courses and had beautifully laid out campuses (no A/C in a lot of dorms though). I can't put my finger on WHY none of us were enthused. For us parents, perhaps it was the price sinking in. We'd rather pay just for the courses, you know? Seems like the manicured grounds, athletic complex and all the extras are weighing down the budget here :-) DS was looking for small classes and a particular program, and he'd rather go to a less selective school that has that program than these beautiful SLACs, even if the classes are bigger. His preferred school is *even more expensive*, but since it's less selective, he's hoping for merit aid and the school did say that they offered some at his range of stats. [b] We really should be moving towards a European-style, subsidized post-secondary education, with just the academics, no frills. That way, more people will have the opportunity to receive a better education, and we might avoid election pitfalls such as our ongoing political saga. [/b] [/quote] As someone with one of these European educations you idealize, I really hope the US doesn’t go that way. I think it would be a terrible loss. [/quote] Most of the parents who wish for the “European” system don’t realize that, if their kid doesn’t qualify for generous merit aid in the US, they wouldn’t even be on the college track in most “European” countries. [/quote] Yes---Europe begins "tracking students" into 3 or 4 tracks around the Middle school level. If you don't make the cut at age 10/11, your kid simply will not be an engineer/STEM, as they won't have the background courses to succeed at that or even get a slot in a university. I'd prefer that my kids have the option to select what they want to major in/study for a career themselves when they are 18-20, not at age 10 [/quote]
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