Anonymous wrote:OP here.
I wrote that off the cuff, and am surprised it offended people. I was in the midst of sticker shock at the cost of some of the state schools.
People who know me would be entertained seeing this directed at me: "I love these posts where the OP is so confident and wants to make sure by making other people prover her wrong." I'm NEVER sure of my choices or that I'm right.
Actually I'd love to be persuaded against pressuring my kid to attend in-state. I get it, Maryland is boring if you grew up here. I was very eager to get away to the east coast for college when I was in high school. But I just can't see how it makes sense if it's double to quadruple the cost for a similar educational option. And it's not because I am (as another PP suggested) broke and bitter. It's because I'm frugal and practical.
I meant to qualify the question by saying this is assuming the kid gets in to their state flagship. Personally, I think every state should prioritize in-state kids more. It sucks that so many kids were getting rejected from UMD despite good stats. Definitely makes me want to make sure my second DS applies to more of the in-state schools.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is interested in CU Boulder and a bunch of other big publics (Illinois, Wisconsin, Penn State)
But if those places are over 50K, why would any of them ever be a good choice compared to UMD? He's interested in physics, which UMD is highly ranked in.
The only reason to go elsewhere is simply itchy feet, wanting to be further from home, which I can udnerstand. Not sure it's a sentiment that it's worth 100K+ over four years to indulge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid really wants to live in Colorado as an adult so I could see paying for UC Boulder as the first step towards making that happen. We could easily afford it so not sure what the issue is. Of we had less money, we wouldn't consider it.
First step is referring to it as CU Boulder.
Anonymous wrote:My kid really wants to live in Colorado as an adult so I could see paying for UC Boulder as the first step towards making that happen. We could easily afford it so not sure what the issue is. Of we had less money, we wouldn't consider it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is interested in CU Boulder and a bunch of other big publics (Illinois, Wisconsin, Penn State)
But if those places are over 50K, why would any of them ever be a good choice compared to UMD? He's interested in physics, which UMD is highly ranked in.
The only reason to go elsewhere is simply itchy feet, wanting to be further from home, which I can understand. Not sure it's a sentiment that it's worth 100K+ over four years to indulge.
1. To make poor parents like you jealous.
2. Rich kids are more likely to have 'itchy feet' i.e. be terribly bored of the region they grew up in, and seek to broaden their horizons.
Anonymous wrote:There have been so many threads about this topic OP - do a search.
We're MD residents and DC got into UMD. DC actually really liked the school but didn't want to be 30 minutes from home. No other MD state schools were even a consideration.
DC got into Michigan, Wisconsin, UT Austin and four UCs including UCLA. Top choices were UT Austin and UCLA - LOVED both schools but ultimately chose UCLA. We can more than afford it and UCLA is is absolutely worth it. DC is having an amazing experience, loves the school, campus, major, friends and LA. DC couldn't wait to get out of the DMV and will most definitely stay in CA.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is interested in CU Boulder and a bunch of other big publics (Illinois, Wisconsin, Penn State)
But if those places are over 50K, why would any of them ever be a good choice compared to UMD? He's interested in physics, which UMD is highly ranked in.
The only reason to go elsewhere is simply itchy feet, wanting to be further from home, which I can understand. Not sure it's a sentiment that it's worth 100K+ over four years to indulge.
Anonymous wrote:They have more money than you so their priorities are different.