Anonymous wrote:I agree, op. It’s a shame and a scandal. We’re saving for public university and will urge our kids to choose wisely in terms of value. We both went to Top 20 SLACs, but not sure they’re going to be a smart investment for our kids.
Anonymous wrote:This is why there are constant articles and discussion about college costs. Most UMC folks are usually well aware of this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Per year?
OP here-- yes!! Per year!! I'm sure that they offer a lot more in terms of academics, but it wasn't a great selling point for the middle class.
OP, I doubt you are real middle class. You don't make under $80-100K. They offer the same academics. You are paying for name and prestige. Its all about luck with the professors your child gets.
OP here-- no, I'm considered UMC by most standards, but I was raised in poverty and it still shapes a lot of my thinking about value. The problem with name and prestige is that I've never heard of a lot of these colleges until I started googling them for my son. I used to make hiring decisions at my previous job (at a University, ironically)--we didn't really pay much attention to "place of education" unless someone had an advance degree or they graduated from a big shot school like Stanford.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS is starting to think of colleges (he's fifteen) and I was casually browsing some of the smaller, private schools-- the cost of these places is insane. Yes, we're realistic (529 plan and know that college is expensive). It just struck me that there are so *many* extremely expensive colleges, and most of them I've never heard of or wouldn't think twice about if I saw them on a resume.
I'm not trying to stir a fight-- I know that colleges are a lot about fit, and maybe these places offer something extraordinary, but many seem like rich people schools-- one said they basically cavort in LL Bean and music is a top major-- cost of attendance $80,000. SMH.
I'm middle-aged and one of the SLACs I considered in the early 90s was $26k a year (including room and board), so just over $100K for four years. At the time, it was the second most expensive private college in the country. The exponential rate of college pricing is disgraceful, and tied heavily into the behemoth student loan industry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Per year?
OP here-- yes!! Per year!! I'm sure that they offer a lot more in terms of academics, but it wasn't a great selling point for the middle class.
OP, I doubt you are real middle class. You don't make under $80-100K. They offer the same academics. You are paying for name and prestige. Its all about luck with the professors your child gets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS is starting to think of colleges (he's fifteen) and I was casually browsing some of the smaller, private schools-- the cost of these places is insane. Yes, we're realistic (529 plan and know that college is expensive). It just struck me that there are so *many* extremely expensive colleges, and most of them I've never heard of or wouldn't think twice about if I saw them on a resume.
I'm not trying to stir a fight-- I know that colleges are a lot about fit, and maybe these places offer something extraordinary, but many seem like rich people schools-- one said they basically cavort in LL Bean and music is a top major-- cost of attendance $80,000. SMH.
I'm middle-aged and one of the SLACs I considered in the early 90s was $26k a year (including room and board), so just over $100K for four years. At the time, it was the second most expensive private college in the country. The exponential rate of college pricing is disgraceful, and tied heavily into the behemoth student loan industry.
Anonymous wrote:My DS is starting to think of colleges (he's fifteen) and I was casually browsing some of the smaller, private schools-- the cost of these places is insane. Yes, we're realistic (529 plan and know that college is expensive). It just struck me that there are so *many* extremely expensive colleges, and most of them I've never heard of or wouldn't think twice about if I saw them on a resume.
I'm not trying to stir a fight-- I know that colleges are a lot about fit, and maybe these places offer something extraordinary, but many seem like rich people schools-- one said they basically cavort in LL Bean and music is a top major-- cost of attendance $80,000. SMH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Per year?
OP here-- yes!! Per year!! I'm sure that they offer a lot more in terms of academics, but it wasn't a great selling point for the middle class.
Anonymous wrote:Per year?