Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP cites a 50% dropout rate at VCU - I'm betting that a good part of that is issues with finances.
That's what you hear, but it's really because we let in far too many that are too far behind, too immature, and have no study skills. They require two years of remedial courses and even then very few ever really catch up. I've witnessed hundreds of low-income kids with full rides fail out before freshman year is over.
In 2013, 77% of adults from families in the top income quartile earned at least bachelor’s degrees by the time they turned 24 ... but 9% of people from the lowest income bracket did the same in 2013.
Less than one in five college students from the lowest income bracket completed a bachelor’s degree by age 24 in 2013. Among students from top-earning families, meanwhile, 99% of students who enrolled completed their degrees.
Op estimated the family's hhi at about 130k. Pretty sure that puts them in the top quarter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP cites a 50% dropout rate at VCU - I'm betting that a good part of that is issues with finances.
That's what you hear, but it's really because we let in far too many that are too far behind, too immature, and have no study skills. They require two years of remedial courses and even then very few ever really catch up. I've witnessed hundreds of low-income kids with full rides fail out before freshman year is over.
In 2013, 77% of adults from families in the top income quartile earned at least bachelor’s degrees by the time they turned 24 ... but 9% of people from the lowest income bracket did the same in 2013.
Less than one in five college students from the lowest income bracket completed a bachelor’s degree by age 24 in 2013. Among students from top-earning families, meanwhile, 99% of students who enrolled completed their degrees.
Anonymous wrote:OP cites a 50% dropout rate at VCU - I'm betting that a good part of that is issues with finances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Welcome to the trailer park
Go fuck yourself.
Is that trailer park enough for you?
Congratulations on being raised by parents who had plenty of money and privilege. Not every one does. Unfortunately, all that privilege results in a terminal lack of empathy for some. Maybe therapy could help you with that, but I am not sure.
It's not a money thing; it's a low culture-stupidity-ego-power thing. I don't judge anyone for having less money - but I do judge ignorant adults jeopardizing their children's futures because they're too stupid to take a step back and realize college prep isn't their wheelhouse and welcome the generous help. It really boils down to "Ain't no uppity aunt and uncle gonna tell me what's best for me (step) kids."
Do you know how much plumbers make? Or welders? Or really talented hair stylists?
OP, you have to be one of the most ignorant snobs ever produced by dcum.
Remember, one does not need to graduate from Harvard or an ivy to have a rich and fulfilling life.
And even more important, you only need to look at the value systems of fields like the finance field, big law and politics to easily see that all that money spent on those prestigious degrees does nothing to create kind, empathetic, moral people with rich and rewarding lives who make the world a better place.
In fact, if you want your nephews to be good people who are kind and happy, you really should lower your snob treshold and get in contact with the rest of the world.
Anonymous wrote:My DH and I have no college fund saved for our kids. We are both highly educated, and we have put our money into real estate. While we can afford most of the in state tuition for both our kids, we also want them to get academic scholarships and start earning during college. We have invested greatly into their other pursuits, sports and tutoring and private schools now. If they insist on going into a school we can't afford fully from our salaries, we'll help as much as we can but the rest is up to them. DS is on the path to get at least a partial sport's scholarship and academic and quite frankly, UMD is a great school, that we can afford, and if they want to go somewhere else, they can find a way. I am more educated than DH and earn 20 times less than he does, so in the end all that education didn't matter due to my choices to mostly spend time with my kids and work part time. Kids who want it will find a way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Several of my uncles did not go to college. One of them (who is actually just a few years older than me) married a woman who did not graduate from college. They are lovely people but they've really struggled financially. They've never had any real intellectual interests or pursuits and did not provide a rich learning environment for their kids. But they did the best they could by their kids and tried to support their interests. Their older son struggled in high school, started community college but dropped out, and now, in his late 20s, appears to support himself as a small-time drug dealer. Not a success story.
But their younger son was good in math. Really good. My uncle and aunt had no way to help him. Once he got to algebra, they couldn't help with homework. He went to a pretty crappy high school with not many opportunities to pursue advanced math. They could not afford tutors and knew nothing of SAT prep. But he had decent grades and solid SAT scores. He went to community college for 2 years and then was accepted to a decent college (ranked in the 50s on the USNWR university list) and got some financial aid. He lived at home all through college, and he and his parents worked their butts off to pay for it.
Last spring he was accepted to a fully funded Ph.D. program. At MIT.
I'm guessing he's pretty happy no one decided he was washed up at 18.
Great story, but literally 1 in a million - an outlier. 9 out of 10 from this background end up more like the oldest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Several of my uncles did not go to college. One of them (who is actually just a few years older than me) married a woman who did not graduate from college. They are lovely people but they've really struggled financially. They've never had any real intellectual interests or pursuits and did not provide a rich learning environment for their kids. But they did the best they could by their kids and tried to support their interests. Their older son struggled in high school, started community college but dropped out, and now, in his late 20s, appears to support himself as a small-time drug dealer. Not a success story.
But their younger son was good in math. Really good. My uncle and aunt had no way to help him. Once he got to algebra, they couldn't help with homework. He went to a pretty crappy high school with not many opportunities to pursue advanced math. They could not afford tutors and knew nothing of SAT prep. But he had decent grades and solid SAT scores. He went to community college for 2 years and then was accepted to a decent college (ranked in the 50s on the USNWR university list) and got some financial aid. He lived at home all through college, and he and his parents worked their butts off to pay for it.
Last spring he was accepted to a fully funded Ph.D. program. At MIT.
I'm guessing he's pretty happy no one decided he was washed up at 18.
Great story, but literally 1 in a million - an outlier. 9 out of 10 from this background end up more like the oldest.
Anonymous wrote:Several of my uncles did not go to college. One of them (who is actually just a few years older than me) married a woman who did not graduate from college. They are lovely people but they've really struggled financially. They've never had any real intellectual interests or pursuits and did not provide a rich learning environment for their kids. But they did the best they could by their kids and tried to support their interests. Their older son struggled in high school, started community college but dropped out, and now, in his late 20s, appears to support himself as a small-time drug dealer. Not a success story.
But their younger son was good in math. Really good. My uncle and aunt had no way to help him. Once he got to algebra, they couldn't help with homework. He went to a pretty crappy high school with not many opportunities to pursue advanced math. They could not afford tutors and knew nothing of SAT prep. But he had decent grades and solid SAT scores. He went to community college for 2 years and then was accepted to a decent college (ranked in the 50s on the USNWR university list) and got some financial aid. He lived at home all through college, and he and his parents worked their butts off to pay for it.
Last spring he was accepted to a fully funded Ph.D. program. At MIT.
I'm guessing he's pretty happy no one decided he was washed up at 18.