Anonymous wrote:Where were all these policies when I went to college. Other than subsidized Stafford loans, I didn’t get crap, despite having two non college educated parents and HHI 60k. Loans for me. It sucked.
Anonymous wrote:Penn eliminating home equity is a much bigger change than the income threshold raised $50k.
I bet there were plenty of $150k applicants with $250k+ of home equity. That was why Princeton’s aid packages were always much more generous for two identical families.
This will open up aid to a large group…I gather existing students can now request aid based on these changes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MIT just announced free tuition for everyone under 200k.
Why do these universities try to do so much social engineering? How about just giving everyone the same flat rate? (that would obviously be a lot less than current list price)
tell me you have always been uber rich without telling me. good grief.
Anonymous wrote:MIT just announced free tuition for everyone under 200k.
Why do these universities try to do so much social engineering? How about just giving everyone the same flat rate? (that would obviously be a lot less than current list price)
Anonymous wrote:MIT just announced free tuition for everyone under 200k.
Why do these universities try to do so much social engineering? How about just giving everyone the same flat rate? (that would obviously be a lot less than current list price)
Anonymous wrote:MIT just announced free tuition for everyone under 200k.
Why do these universities try to do so much social engineering? How about just giving everyone the same flat rate? (that would obviously be a lot less than current list price)
Anonymous wrote:MIT just announced free tuition for everyone under 200k.
Why do these universities try to do so much social engineering? How about just giving everyone the same flat rate? (that would obviously be a lot less than current list price)
Anonymous wrote:Effective in the 2025-26 academic year, Penn will no longer consider the value of the primary family home among assets in determining the amount of financial aid eligibility and will raise the income threshold for families eligible to receive full tuition scholarships from $140,000 to $200,000 with typical assets.
Question is what are typical assets? How many people make 200k and have limited liquid assets? Or do they intentionally try to keep them out of liquid accounts?
Anonymous wrote:We have limited. Most of our net worth is in retirement and home equity. Nominal outside of that.