Anonymous wrote:Yes, it works like this. Someone has to fund the endowment and pay full freight + extra.
Who's it going to be?
Anonymous wrote:how in the world do you know this OP? I don't believe your post because I don't believe that they would tell you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the way US colleges work. Keep in mind the checks from wealthy families help pay for low income students too.
I was a full pay kid, my roommate was on full financial aid. Even Brown University, which has a large endowment, is $46 million dollars short on budget. Tough times are coming for many schools.
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/quick-takes/2024/12/20/brown-faces-46-million-budget-deficit
Maybe schools should stop paying for so many administrators and focus on what works.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with the last part. I was unhooked kid from a nowhere high school who attended an Ivy League school. No test prep, no special programs. Worked a job and went to school. Sailed through. Private school kids weren’t any different from the other kids there when it came to academics.
Anonymous wrote:It's the way US colleges work. Keep in mind the checks from wealthy families help pay for low income students too.
I was a full pay kid, my roommate was on full financial aid. Even Brown University, which has a large endowment, is $46 million dollars short on budget. Tough times are coming for many schools.
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/quick-takes/2024/12/20/brown-faces-46-million-budget-deficit
Anonymous wrote:test-in public school where probably 90% of kids in a given year would be considered "unhooked."
excellent academic reputation
high SAT
more A's than B's
basic ECs
probably around the 50th percentile in the grade
- eg not really Ivy material.
High SAT and mid-rank at at a test-in school with an excellent academic reputation, and you think he wouldn't be Ivy material (with exception for the z list angle) because of rank and basic ECs? That's not how it works. Maybe his hook is ultimately gets him in, but don't pretend he isn't academically qualified, because he is.
test-in public school where probably 90% of kids in a given year would be considered "unhooked."
excellent academic reputation
high SAT
more A's than B's
basic ECs
probably around the 50th percentile in the grade
- eg not really Ivy material.
Anonymous wrote:My Ivy kid certainly didn't have mommy or daddy's checkbook or any hooks or special prep, private counselors. He did have perfect grades, scores and lots of activities he was committed to (but they were fairly common--but cleared he loved them).
His roommate is a middle class public school kid (a very, very smart one).
You really shouldn't make judgements. I had people saying my kid got in on athletics...for a sport he stopped playing freshmen year of HS. People talk out of their *ss.