Anonymous wrote:There are no colleges in the world I would send my child to that required them to take loans. Period.
Anonymous wrote:Easy. Any Ivy, MIT, Stanford, Cal Tech, Northwestern, Chicago, Duke, Hopkins. Preference for any Ivy. Out of State, probably Berkley, maybe Michigan. We are in state Virginia so that would not be full price.
Easiest question ever on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:While $7500 per year seems a relatively small amount, we went into the whole college savings game with the intention to Fully Pay for private college for 4 years, which is what we did. I said Zero Loans, and so we're not doing any loans. So my answer would be, none of them, and look for merit or public that you Can afford. BC if you need to borrow 7500, that means your budget is really stretched thin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Assuming that paying full price included taking out a total of $30,000 in loans over 4 years (average of $7,500 per year), for which elite colleges and universities would you pay full price ? (I specify the loan amounts to depict one who must sacrifice to attend an elite school at full sticker price.)
Assume that the student is undecided regarding major and career.
Nope. Not gonna play. It’s a silly game until you know where you’re accepted to.
Anonymous wrote:Assuming that paying full price included taking out a total of $30,000 in loans over 4 years (average of $7,500 per year), for which elite colleges and universities would you pay full price ? (I specify the loan amounts to depict one who must sacrifice to attend an elite school at full sticker price.)
Assume that the student is undecided regarding major and career.
Anonymous wrote:Assuming that paying full price included taking out a total of $30,000 in loans over 4 years (average of $7,500 per year), for which elite colleges and universities would you pay full price ? (I specify the loan amounts to depict one who must sacrifice to attend an elite school at full sticker price.)
Assume that the student is undecided regarding major and career.