That sucks.Anonymous wrote:Be careful that they don’t have requirements to maintain a certain gpa. Law school is curved and it’s easy to not meet the requirement. I know someone who dropped out of law school after a year because her merit aid was pulled after she got below at 3.5 or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can also work at a university and get reduced tuition at law school. I know someone who graduated Georgetown Law this way.
In the 90's, many schools were free.
Now, you have to work there a minimum number of years (several) for partial tuition decrease, and there is no longer total tuition decrease - unless you have worked there for decades, and are grandfathered in.
I think there is a common misconception that what was true in the 90's (free school!) is true now. It is most definitely not.
This. Georgetown used to have very generous tuition benefits for employees and their children but this has been reduced through the years. I believe only grandfathered employees who started more than 15 years ago get the most generous benefits now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can also work at a university and get reduced tuition at law school. I know someone who graduated Georgetown Law this way.
In the 90's, many schools were free.
Now, you have to work there a minimum number of years (several) for partial tuition decrease, and there is no longer total tuition decrease - unless you have worked there for decades, and are grandfathered in.
I think there is a common misconception that what was true in the 90's (free school!) is true now. It is most definitely not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can also work at a university and get reduced tuition at law school. I know someone who graduated Georgetown Law this way.
In the 90's, many schools were free.
Now, you have to work there a minimum number of years (several) for partial tuition decrease, and there is no longer total tuition decrease - unless you have worked there for decades, and are grandfathered in.
I think there is a common misconception that what was true in the 90's (free school!) is true now. It is most definitely not.
Anonymous wrote:They almost all provide merit aid. Maybe not Yale and Stanford but otherwise this is a common approach. I got a very generous merit grant to Northwestern; a close friend got generous grants from Chicago.
Anonymous wrote:You can also work at a university and get reduced tuition at law school. I know someone who graduated Georgetown Law this way.