Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
so you feel entitled to financial aid so that instead of paying for tuition you have that $1200 to spend on the ticket alone not to mention incidental expenses which again push this cost much higher than you are reporting.
A visit to Europe when you can't afford tuition is wrong. I don't care who lives there. If its that important, than choose free public school and trips to Europe. NO you can't have both when you have limited means.
Yes I feel entitled to financial because I qualify for it and because I get it.
My kid does fly to Europe and that is none of your business. He gets to live and experience another culture as well for just about no cost. He is just a regular kid and we really do have both.
And my kid will compete with your kid when it comes to scholarships and places at the top universities. He will compete with yours when it comes to employment and internships.
And you will not see me begging for food at the traffic lights, we even heat our house in the winter. The public school is as good as it can be, but I chose private for the same reason you did.
Life is as good as it can be. I love my job
I do not have 2 jobs and have no desire to hold down 2 jobs. I need to see my child as well to be a good parent. You really do need to give them more than your wealth and absense. But since we do not have wealth, providing them with our absense will do no good.
What I do with my money is not your business and there is nothing you can do about it
What I do with my money is not your business and there is nothing you can do about it
Anonymous wrote:
so you feel entitled to financial aid so that instead of paying for tuition you have that $1200 to spend on the ticket alone not to mention incidental expenses which again push this cost much higher than you are reporting.
A visit to Europe when you can't afford tuition is wrong. I don't care who lives there. If its that important, than choose free public school and trips to Europe. NO you can't have both when you have limited means.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child is in lower school so we are talking young kid - the extra curriculars are usually mulitple dance/gymnastics and sports classes - all private. Some with private coaching on the side. The private summer camps also.
Vacations - it usually ends up being at least one big Disney trip, cruises, trips to ski, trips to the beach - in fact the destination doesn't matter when you are paying air fare for a family of 4 or 5 - 3 to 4 times a year it adds up to a lot.
how old is the kid? Because a summer camp is a must for working parents, and they are all private
Dance, gym, sport?? Nothing wrong with that.
Trips to the beach - I do not believe you actually said that.
Trips to ski - those are incredibly cheap if you know where to go and what to look for
For your information, my kids flight to Europe to spend 2 weeks at granny was $1200. He flew by himself and my parents insisted on paying his expenses once he was there.
I once had a job where travel was required, so I got enough frequent flyer club points to afford free flights for the family and we went to California. My cousin drives a company car, i.e. not his own. My neighbor has rich parents and the grandparents sponsor a yearly holiday for the family.
Even cruises can be got on the cheap if you are educated enough
Anonymous wrote:I don't get all these allegations of people who don't need FA getting it. We just missed the cut off (school told us at application time we'd probably get something, and then after the calculations came back saying we didn't need any...we didn't get any.) So we pay full freight, and we tighten our belts. There are certainly no Disney vacations or cruises or million dollar houses in our life. How, then (aside from the weird, probably very rare situation of a couple divorcing and then one party refusing to pay tuition) do you think a family with financial aid can live it up? I can't live it up, and the $15 in aid that family is getting wouldn't allow me to live it up.
In addition, the cost of educating a kid is higher than anyone pays in tuition. So, if you pay full tuition and resent that your money is going to pay for some ungrateful upper middle class professor's kid...you can lay that burden down. It's not. That person writing the four figure check is picking up the tab, voluntarily.
Anonymous wrote:My child is in lower school so we are talking young kid - the extra curriculars are usually mulitple dance/gymnastics and sports classes - all private. Some with private coaching on the side. The private summer camps also.
Vacations - it usually ends up being at least one big Disney trip, cruises, trips to ski, trips to the beach - in fact the destination doesn't matter when you are paying air fare for a family of 4 or 5 - 3 to 4 times a year it adds up to a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what extracurriculars?
what vacations? A flight to Europe to spend a month on grandmothers couch?
My child is in lower school so we are talking young kid - the extra curriculars are usually mulitple dance/gymnastics and sports classes - all private. Some with private coaching on the side. The private summer camps also.
Vacations - it usually ends up being at least one big Disney trip, cruises, trips to ski, trips to the beach - in fact the destination doesn't matter when you are paying air fare for a family of 4 or 5 - 3 to 4 times a year it adds up to a lot.