Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs outside of the NE continue to gain in popularity (Rhodes, Sewanee, Kenyon, Denison, Macalester, Occidental).
They give merit aid. Lot of parents in the donuthole, which makes them affluent (high achieving kids) in urban areas. Out of pocket, likely 80k by the time my kid graduates, times two kids. When WM is an excellent in state option. Just not going to happen. Oberlin or Grinnell with about 20k to bridge the gap? Very interested. Probably more interested in Bates, Bowden, Reed or Amherst. But with no merit aid, we aren’t even considering them. We can’t be the only parents making this calculation.
I know of two NVa kids admitted to Sewanee and Rhodes this year with merit aid that put the net cost about 15% lower than W&M in-state. (Have you looked at W&M's total cost of attendance for next year? It was an eye opener for me.) So, don't assume a LAC is out of the question from a cost standpoint.
2018-2019 W&M COA
[b]In-State: $39,225
OOS: $61,370
Yowza![/b]
Holy, Moley, when did that happen? I have a student at UVA. We're paying only $23K (everything included).
$23K? Does your student have a scholarship? None of these figures are near $23K, they are higher:
https://sfs.virginia.edu/cost/18-19
It's based on year that you entered. DC is a fourth year student
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs outside of the NE continue to gain in popularity (Rhodes, Sewanee, Kenyon, Denison, Macalester, Occidental).
They give merit aid. Lot of parents in the donuthole, which makes them affluent (high achieving kids) in urban areas. Out of pocket, likely 80k by the time my kid graduates, times two kids. When WM is an excellent in state option. Just not going to happen. Oberlin or Grinnell with about 20k to bridge the gap? Very interested. Probably more interested in Bates, Bowden, Reed or Amherst. But with no merit aid, we aren’t even considering them. We can’t be the only parents making this calculation.
I know of two NVa kids admitted to Sewanee and Rhodes this year with merit aid that put the net cost about 15% lower than W&M in-state. (Have you looked at W&M's total cost of attendance for next year? It was an eye opener for me.) So, don't assume a LAC is out of the question from a cost standpoint.
2018-2019 W&M COA
[b]In-State: $39,225
OOS: $61,370
Yowza![/b]
Holy, Moley, when did that happen? I have a student at UVA. We're paying only $23K (everything included).
$23K? Does your student have a scholarship? None of these figures are near $23K, they are higher:
https://sfs.virginia.edu/cost/18-19
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs outside of the NE continue to gain in popularity (Rhodes, Sewanee, Kenyon, Denison, Macalester, Occidental).
They give merit aid. Lot of parents in the donuthole, which makes them affluent (high achieving kids) in urban areas. Out of pocket, likely 80k by the time my kid graduates, times two kids. When WM is an excellent in state option. Just not going to happen. Oberlin or Grinnell with about 20k to bridge the gap? Very interested. Probably more interested in Bates, Bowden, Reed or Amherst. But with no merit aid, we aren’t even considering them. We can’t be the only parents making this calculation.
I know of two NVa kids admitted to Sewanee and Rhodes this year with merit aid that put the net cost about 15% lower than W&M in-state. (Have you looked at W&M's total cost of attendance for next year? It was an eye opener for me.) So, don't assume a LAC is out of the question from a cost standpoint.
2018-2019 W&M COA
[b]In-State: $39,225
OOS: $61,370
Yowza![/b]
Holy, Moley, when did that happen? I have a student at UVA. We're paying only $23K (everything included).
$23K? Does your student have a scholarship? None of these figures are near $23K, they are higher:
https://sfs.virginia.edu/cost/18-19
Anonymous wrote:PP are we will have WM tuition in state saved for each kid, plus two years of room and board per kid. pay the other two years per kid out of income. No loans and we can pay some above WM. But not $300k all in times 2 kids.
I hate that it is all need based, but does not consider that we live in NOVA, not SC, and because we were using saving for several years during the recession. Not adding to college funds. Good income now. But not 6-7 years ago. But colleges don’t consider these things in awarding aid
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs outside of the NE continue to gain in popularity (Rhodes, Sewanee, Kenyon, Denison, Macalester, Occidental).
They give merit aid. Lot of parents in the donuthole, which makes them affluent (high achieving kids) in urban areas. Out of pocket, likely 80k by the time my kid graduates, times two kids. When WM is an excellent in state option. Just not going to happen. Oberlin or Grinnell with about 20k to bridge the gap? Very interested. Probably more interested in Bates, Bowden, Reed or Amherst. But with no merit aid, we aren’t even considering them. We can’t be the only parents making this calculation.
I know of two NVa kids admitted to Sewanee and Rhodes this year with merit aid that put the net cost about 15% lower than W&M in-state. (Have you looked at W&M's total cost of attendance for next year? It was an eye opener for me.) So, don't assume a LAC is out of the question from a cost standpoint.
NEASCA colleges, by definition, do not give merit aid. Period. If you are in the donut hole for Williams, have a 1600 SAT, are an olympic athlete, are a Siemens finalist, cure cancer and graduate #1 in you class at TJ (where my kid actually is doing well) you still will not get a cent of merit aid from Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin, Bates, Colgate, etc. Reed has the same policy. As do Ivy’s. So even though my kid is topping out TJ with significant extracurriculars and SATs above 99%, he cannot even consider these schools. HHI $275. But, we live in the DMV (high COL) and are putting 2 kids through college over 6 years.
We have been saving more than $1500 per kid per month for several years. But we got killed in the recession with both parents losing jobs at various points and our house losing 100k in value. So we did not have steady saving during the recession.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs outside of the NE continue to gain in popularity (Rhodes, Sewanee, Kenyon, Denison, Macalester, Occidental).
They give merit aid. Lot of parents in the donuthole, which makes them affluent (high achieving kids) in urban areas. Out of pocket, likely 80k by the time my kid graduates, times two kids. When WM is an excellent in state option. Just not going to happen. Oberlin or Grinnell with about 20k to bridge the gap? Very interested. Probably more interested in Bates, Bowden, Reed or Amherst. But with no merit aid, we aren’t even considering them. We can’t be the only parents making this calculation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs outside of the NE continue to gain in popularity (Rhodes, Sewanee, Kenyon, Denison, Macalester, Occidental).
They give merit aid. Lot of parents in the donuthole, which makes them affluent (high achieving kids) in urban areas. Out of pocket, likely 80k by the time my kid graduates, times two kids. When WM is an excellent in state option. Just not going to happen. Oberlin or Grinnell with about 20k to bridge the gap? Very interested. Probably more interested in Bates, Bowden, Reed or Amherst. But with no merit aid, we aren’t even considering them. We can’t be the only parents making this calculation.
I know of two NVa kids admitted to Sewanee and Rhodes this year with merit aid that put the net cost about 15% lower than W&M in-state. (Have you looked at W&M's total cost of attendance for next year? It was an eye opener for me.) So, don't assume a LAC is out of the question from a cost standpoint.
2018-2019 W&M COA
[b]In-State: $39,225
OOS: $61,370
Yowza![/b]
Holy, Moley, when did that happen? I have a student at UVA. We're paying only $23K (everything included).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs outside of the NE continue to gain in popularity (Rhodes, Sewanee, Kenyon, Denison, Macalester, Occidental).
They give merit aid. Lot of parents in the donuthole, which makes them affluent (high achieving kids) in urban areas. Out of pocket, likely 80k by the time my kid graduates, times two kids. When WM is an excellent in state option. Just not going to happen. Oberlin or Grinnell with about 20k to bridge the gap? Very interested. Probably more interested in Bates, Bowden, Reed or Amherst. But with no merit aid, we aren’t even considering them. We can’t be the only parents making this calculation.
I know of two NVa kids admitted to Sewanee and Rhodes this year with merit aid that put the net cost about 15% lower than W&M in-state. (Have you looked at W&M's total cost of attendance for next year? It was an eye opener for me.) So, don't assume a LAC is out of the question from a cost standpoint.
2018-2019 W&M COA
[b]In-State: $39,225
OOS: $61,370
Yowza![/b]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any theories on what is driving increasing popularity of women's colleges?
More women are comfortable about "coming out" earlier in their lives
Troll alert.