Tufts 'ranks' 27 on the US News. Not that's the primary reason DC is looking at Tufts. Its academics are impressive and has been added for fall applications.Anonymous wrote:Tufts has come up considerably in the last 10 years. Not Ivy, but it tries hard.
I am completely baffled by all the interest in Alabama around here.
I think I read that it's free if you have a certain gpa?
Anonymous wrote:
At my DCs OOS state flagship many of the OOS students (which is more than 40% of the overall student body) are full pay at close to $55k/year.
Which state is this?
Michigan
Anonymous wrote:I am completely baffled by all the interest in Alabama around here.
Anonymous wrote:I am completely baffled by all the interest in Alabama around here.
Anonymous wrote:At my DCs OOS state flagship many of the OOS students (which is more than 40% of the overall student body) are full pay at close to $55k/year.
Which state is this?
Anonymous wrote:WAKE FOREST - acceptance rate now down to 28% for the class of 2019
At my DCs OOS state flagship many of the OOS students (which is more than 40% of the overall student body) are full pay at close to $55k/year.
Anonymous wrote:
Colleges that are most affordable and you get the biggest bang for the buck like large Flagship/State Universities. Also community colleges. $65,000 a year for a private is a broken model.
Very, very few are actually paying 65K.
If you mean of all college students that's probably true. If you mean at colleges that charge $65k/year that's not true. At most private colleges about 35-40% are full pay. That's not insignificant. At my DCs OOS state flagship many of the OOS students (which is more than 40% of the overall student body) are full pay at close to $55k/year.
Anonymous wrote:Elon, Carlton, and a whole bunch of Southern schools (Alabama, Sewanee, etc...) Rich kids are getting shut out of the top tier schools and attending (and thus increasing the prestige of) lower tier schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colleges that are most affordable and you get the biggest bang for the buck like large Flagship/State Universities. Also community colleges. $65,000 a year for a private is a broken model.
Very, very few are actually paying 65K.
If you mean of all college students that's probably true. If you mean at colleges that charge $65k/year that's not true. At most private colleges about 35-40% are full pay. That's not insignificant. At my DCs OOS state flagship many of the OOS students (which is more than 40% of the overall student body) are full pay at close to $55k/year.