Anonymous wrote:Awesome, but wasn't Rice tuition-free until the 70s?
Anonymous wrote:I believe that this is in response to the new methodology that USNWR is using to calculate college rankings. It is in the best interest of college admissions to accept less affluent students to be ranked higher. It will be interesting to see how this plays out in the college admissions sweepstakes over time.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are a great example of privilege. Just because OTHER people get something for free, it does not hurt you. Yet you are still upset by it. Because you are UMC and used to the world bending in YOUR favor and not the poor kid's favor. You feel threatened and attacked even when your lot in life has not changed.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are a great example of privilege. Just because OTHER people get something for free, it does not hurt you. Yet you are still upset by it. Because you are UMC and used to the world bending in YOUR favor and not the poor kid's favor. You feel threatened and attacked even when your lot in life has not changed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An friend of mine who is a Rice alum shared this with me: https://news.rice.edu/2018/09/18/rice-university-announces-new-program-to-dramatically-expand-scholarships-for-middle-class-2
I see this as great news for poor families, good news for the middle class, and a wild unknown for upper-middle class.
So, poor families pay nothing. No loans. This is fantastic.
Middle class gets free or heavily reduced tuition. Must pay room & board. This sounds good, and there is still the possibility for other financial aid depending on the situation.
Upper-middle class: I guess nothing changes immediately, but tuition is going to keep rising & now it can rise according to upper class incomes without much notice.
I'd much rather see a true sliding scale; in this way a family making $201k is not viewed through an entirely different lens than a $199k family.
Thoughts?
You sound bitter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An friend of mine who is a Rice alum shared this with me: https://news.rice.edu/2018/09/18/rice-university-announces-new-program-to-dramatically-expand-scholarships-for-middle-class-2
I see this as great news for poor families, good news for the middle class, and a wild unknown for upper-middle class.
So, poor families pay nothing. No loans. This is fantastic.
Middle class gets free or heavily reduced tuition. Must pay room & board. This sounds good, and there is still the possibility for other financial aid depending on the situation.
Upper-middle class: I guess nothing changes immediately, but tuition is going to keep rising & now it can rise according to upper class incomes without much notice.
I'd much rather see a true sliding scale; in this way a family making $201k is not viewed through an entirely different lens than a $199k family.
Thoughts?
You sound bitter.
Anonymous wrote:An friend of mine who is a Rice alum shared this with me: https://news.rice.edu/2018/09/18/rice-university-announces-new-program-to-dramatically-expand-scholarships-for-middle-class-2
I see this as great news for poor families, good news for the middle class, and a wild unknown for upper-middle class.
So, poor families pay nothing. No loans. This is fantastic.
Middle class gets free or heavily reduced tuition. Must pay room & board. This sounds good, and there is still the possibility for other financial aid depending on the situation.
Upper-middle class: I guess nothing changes immediately, but tuition is going to keep rising & now it can rise according to upper class incomes without much notice.
I'd much rather see a true sliding scale; in this way a family making $201k is not viewed through an entirely different lens than a $199k family.
Thoughts?