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Reply to "Bethesda Magazine - List of College Acceptances"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]The big difference between the top publics' exmissions and the top privates' exmissions? Family finances. Step out of your bubbles, won't you, and take a look at the realities facing families who aren't already shelling out $35k/year for private school. Your average two-govt worker family with a household income of $200k faces the following facts: - None of the Ivies offers merit aid. None of the Ivies. - The $200k HHI family won't qualify for any financial aid. - The $200k HHI family will probably be hard put to pay the full $60k/year Ivy/private university tuition. - UMD and UVA look like bargains by comparison. - Early decision boosts your acceptance chances dramatically, but it's a game for families that can lock into a school without waiting to see the financial aid award. Why you guys can't see this is mystifying. Welcome to the real world.[/quote] Yes, I'm sure every family looks at college costs and factors that into decisions. And perhaps that analysis scares off some students from matriculating/applying. But the Holton/Landon % are three times higher than the Whitman percentages. Are you really trying to argue that three times as many Whitman students would have been admitted to Ivy colleges, but simply chose not to apply because they couldn't afford it? That seems unlikely to me. Also, FWIW, are student loans no longer available? When I attended college, I was in the exact situation you describe -- parents made enough to limit my financial aid options, but not enough to pay for college -- so I just financed my college tuition via low-cost student loans. I spent the first several years of my working life paying those off, but that's just the price I had to pay. Even dumb me knew it was a smart bargain. And if I'd been admitted to some fancy-pants college like Harvard or Yale, I'd surely have taken on extra loans in a heart-beat.[/quote]
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