Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs have very low ROI compared to state schools:
https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-Salaries_for_Colleges_by_Type-sort.html
They seem like a total scam except for the 1%. Much better for your future to go to UMD or Ohio State or Indians or Purdue or VA Tech to study engineering or business while enjoying college sports.
SLACs seem like a waste for all but the wealthy 1%era who don’t have to worry about finding a job after graduation. Many of them don’t have big college sports or Greek Life to generate alumni loyalty. What’s the point of them?
You won't win this argument here. Most parents on here are lawyers or have grad degrees via a liberal arts undergrad route. A lot of them are SAHMs who vehemently support a SLAC education and have the time and energy to rip you apart on this anonymous forum, lest their choices and decisions be deemed inferior. Almost like how every car buyer thinks they bought the best car at the best price. Much like sports (where kids typically seem to play a sport one of the parent's played) they 'push' their kids down a path similar to theirs. Most have grad school expectations for their kids and save money accordingly (as is obvious from the various collegeds per hour for SAT prep (even in this test optional era) and college counselor (who pretty much tells the kids where to apply, what to write about, and writes the essay while making the kid and parent believe they came up with the idea and wrote the essays
).
Anyhoo.. If you want to study a 'hard' subject that gives you a job after an undergrad, go Public or top large private (non-LAC). If you want an undergrad education with plans for immediate grad school (law, medicine, etc.) go (S)LAC. Most are unreasonably expensive for what you get in return but tend to subsidize COA outside the top 10-20, maybe 30.
OP here. Agree 100% with you. I see the threads on here calling Asians “strivers” and “grinding robots” and see the obvious hate for people wanting to better their lot. Paying $50k for Macalester or Haverford after merit aid seems like a total waste.
And yes, it’s obvious here that most of DCUM is useless humanities or social sciences majors who went to law school. But these days, you’ll get more ROI as a CS major from UMD than having a law degree from NYU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs have very low ROI compared to state schools:
https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-Salaries_for_Colleges_by_Type-sort.html
They seem like a total scam except for the 1%. Much better for your future to go to UMD or Ohio State or Indians or Purdue or VA Tech to study engineering or business while enjoying college sports.
SLACs seem like a waste for all but the wealthy 1%era who don’t have to worry about finding a job after graduation. Many of them don’t have big college sports or Greek Life to generate alumni loyalty. What’s the point of them?
You won't win this argument here. Most parents on here are lawyers or have grad degrees via a liberal arts undergrad route. A lot of them are SAHMs who vehemently support a SLAC education and have the time and energy to rip you apart on this anonymous forum, lest their choices and decisions be deemed inferior. Almost like how every car buyer thinks they bought the best car at the best price. Much like sports (where kids typically seem to play a sport one of the parent's played) they 'push' their kids down a path similar to theirs. Most have grad school expectations for their kids and save money accordingly (as is obvious from the various collegeds per hour for SAT prep (even in this test optional era) and college counselor (who pretty much tells the kids where to apply, what to write about, and writes the essay while making the kid and parent believe they came up with the idea and wrote the essays
).
Anyhoo.. If you want to study a 'hard' subject that gives you a job after an undergrad, go Public or top large private (non-LAC). If you want an undergrad education with plans for immediate grad school (law, medicine, etc.) go (S)LAC. Most are unreasonably expensive for what you get in return but tend to subsidize COA outside the top 10-20, maybe 30.
OP here. Agree 100% with you. I see the threads on here calling Asians “strivers” and “grinding robots” and see the obvious hate for people wanting to better their lot. Paying $50k for Macalester or Haverford after merit aid seems like a total waste.
And yes, it’s obvious here that most of DCUM is useless humanities or social sciences majors who went to law school. But these days, you’ll get more ROI as a CS major from UMD than having a law degree from NYU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs have very low ROI compared to state schools:
https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-Salaries_for_Colleges_by_Type-sort.html
They seem like a total scam except for the 1%. Much better for your future to go to UMD or Ohio State or Indians or Purdue or VA Tech to study engineering or business while enjoying college sports.
SLACs seem like a waste for all but the wealthy 1%era who don’t have to worry about finding a job after graduation. Many of them don’t have big college sports or Greek Life to generate alumni loyalty. What’s the point of them?
Anyhoo.. If you want to study a 'hard' subject that gives you a job after an undergrad, go Public or top large private (non-LAC). If you want an undergrad education with plans for immediate grad school (law, medicine, etc.) go (S)LAC. Most are unreasonably expensive for what you get in return but tend to subsidize COA outside the top 10-20, maybe 30.
Simplistic advice reflective of ignorance.
My DC graduated from a LAC last year and is making six figures working on data analysis. DC plans to go to grad school for applied math eventually.
Awesome for your kid! Congratulations! However, unless you can tell me that this is the outcome every kid enjoys from that SLAC, I'm not sure it's relevant. Students out of GMU that study analytics have similar outcomes.
That's why a student's major - no matter where they go to school - along with graduate education drive the "ROI" (a silly way to look at education IMO).
Do you have a trust fund? For most, ROI is the most important part of college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs have very low ROI compared to state schools:
https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-Salaries_for_Colleges_by_Type-sort.html
They seem like a total scam except for the 1%. Much better for your future to go to UMD or Ohio State or Indians or Purdue or VA Tech to study engineering or business while enjoying college sports.
SLACs seem like a waste for all but the wealthy 1%era who don’t have to worry about finding a job after graduation. Many of them don’t have big college sports or Greek Life to generate alumni loyalty. What’s the point of them?
You won't win this argument here. Most parents on here are lawyers or have grad degrees via a liberal arts undergrad route. A lot of them are SAHMs who vehemently support a SLAC education and have the time and energy to rip you apart on this anonymous forum, lest their choices and decisions be deemed inferior. Almost like how every car buyer thinks they bought the best car at the best price. Much like sports (where kids typically seem to play a sport one of the parent's played) they 'push' their kids down a path similar to theirs. Most have grad school expectations for their kids and save money accordingly (as is obvious from the various collegeds per hour for SAT prep (even in this test optional era) and college counselor (who pretty much tells the kids where to apply, what to write about, and writes the essay while making the kid and parent believe they came up with the idea and wrote the essays
).
Anyhoo.. If you want to study a 'hard' subject that gives you a job after an undergrad, go Public or top large private (non-LAC). If you want an undergrad education with plans for immediate grad school (law, medicine, etc.) go (S)LAC. Most are unreasonably expensive for what you get in return but tend to subsidize COA outside the top 10-20, maybe 30.
OP here. Agree 100% with you. I see the threads on here calling Asians “strivers” and “grinding robots” and see the obvious hate for people wanting to better their lot. Paying $50k for Macalester or Haverford after merit aid seems like a total waste.
And yes, it’s obvious here that most of DCUM is useless humanities or social sciences majors who went to law school. But these days, you’ll get more ROI as a CS major from UMD than having a law degree from NYU.
Anonymous wrote:SLACs have very low ROI compared to state schools:
https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-Salaries_for_Colleges_by_Type-sort.html
They seem like a total scam except for the 1%. Much better for your future to go to UMD or Ohio State or Indians or Purdue or VA Tech to study engineering or business while enjoying college sports.
SLACs seem like a waste for all but the wealthy 1%era who don’t have to worry about finding a job after graduation. Many of them don’t have big college sports or Greek Life to generate alumni loyalty. What’s the point of them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs have very low ROI compared to state schools:
https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-Salaries_for_Colleges_by_Type-sort.html
They seem like a total scam except for the 1%. Much better for your future to go to UMD or Ohio State or Indians or Purdue or VA Tech to study engineering or business while enjoying college sports.
SLACs seem like a waste for all but the wealthy 1%era who don’t have to worry about finding a job after graduation. Many of them don’t have big college sports or Greek Life to generate alumni loyalty. What’s the point of them?
Anyhoo.. If you want to study a 'hard' subject that gives you a job after an undergrad, go Public or top large private (non-LAC). If you want an undergrad education with plans for immediate grad school (law, medicine, etc.) go (S)LAC. Most are unreasonably expensive for what you get in return but tend to subsidize COA outside the top 10-20, maybe 30.
Simplistic advice reflective of ignorance.
My DC graduated from a LAC last year and is making six figures working on data analysis. DC plans to go to grad school for applied math eventually.
Awesome for your kid! Congratulations! However, unless you can tell me that this is the outcome every kid enjoys from that SLAC, I'm not sure it's relevant. Students out of GMU that study analytics have similar outcomes.
That's why a student's major - no matter where they go to school - along with graduate education drive the "ROI" (a silly way to look at education IMO).
Do you have a trust fund? For most, ROI is the most important part of college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs have very low ROI compared to state schools:
https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-Salaries_for_Colleges_by_Type-sort.html
They seem like a total scam except for the 1%. Much better for your future to go to UMD or Ohio State or Indians or Purdue or VA Tech to study engineering or business while enjoying college sports.
SLACs seem like a waste for all but the wealthy 1%era who don’t have to worry about finding a job after graduation. Many of them don’t have big college sports or Greek Life to generate alumni loyalty. What’s the point of them?
You won't win this argument here. Most parents on here are lawyers or have grad degrees via a liberal arts undergrad route. A lot of them are SAHMs who vehemently support a SLAC education and have the time and energy to rip you apart on this anonymous forum, lest their choices and decisions be deemed inferior. Almost like how every car buyer thinks they bought the best car at the best price. Much like sports (where kids typically seem to play a sport one of the parent's played) they 'push' their kids down a path similar to theirs. Most have grad school expectations for their kids and save money accordingly (as is obvious from the various collegeds per hour for SAT prep (even in this test optional era) and college counselor (who pretty much tells the kids where to apply, what to write about, and writes the essay while making the kid and parent believe they came up with the idea and wrote the essays
).
Anyhoo.. If you want to study a 'hard' subject that gives you a job after an undergrad, go Public or top large private (non-LAC). If you want an undergrad education with plans for immediate grad school (law, medicine, etc.) go (S)LAC. Most are unreasonably expensive for what you get in return but tend to subsidize COA outside the top 10-20, maybe 30.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs have very low ROI compared to state schools:
https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-Salaries_for_Colleges_by_Type-sort.html
They seem like a total scam except for the 1%. Much better for your future to go to UMD or Ohio State or Indians or Purdue or VA Tech to study engineering or business while enjoying college sports.
SLACs seem like a waste for all but the wealthy 1%era who don’t have to worry about finding a job after graduation. Many of them don’t have big college sports or Greek Life to generate alumni loyalty. What’s the point of them?
Anyhoo.. If you want to study a 'hard' subject that gives you a job after an undergrad, go Public or top large private (non-LAC). If you want an undergrad education with plans for immediate grad school (law, medicine, etc.) go (S)LAC. Most are unreasonably expensive for what you get in return but tend to subsidize COA outside the top 10-20, maybe 30.
Simplistic advice reflective of ignorance.
My DC graduated from a LAC last year and is making six figures working on data analysis. DC plans to go to grad school for applied math eventually.
Awesome for your kid! Congratulations! However, unless you can tell me that this is the outcome every kid enjoys from that SLAC, I'm not sure it's relevant. Students out of GMU that study analytics have similar outcomes.
That's why a student's major - no matter where they go to school - along with graduate education drive the "ROI" (a silly way to look at education IMO).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs have very low ROI compared to state schools:
https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-Salaries_for_Colleges_by_Type-sort.html
They seem like a total scam except for the 1%. Much better for your future to go to UMD or Ohio State or Indians or Purdue or VA Tech to study engineering or business while enjoying college sports.
SLACs seem like a waste for all but the wealthy 1%era who don’t have to worry about finding a job after graduation. Many of them don’t have big college sports or Greek Life to generate alumni loyalty. What’s the point of them?
Anyhoo.. If you want to study a 'hard' subject that gives you a job after an undergrad, go Public or top large private (non-LAC). If you want an undergrad education with plans for immediate grad school (law, medicine, etc.) go (S)LAC. Most are unreasonably expensive for what you get in return but tend to subsidize COA outside the top 10-20, maybe 30.
Simplistic advice reflective of ignorance.
My DC graduated from a LAC last year and is making six figures working on data analysis. DC plans to go to grad school for applied math eventually.
Awesome for your kid! Congratulations! However, unless you can tell me that this is the outcome every kid enjoys from that SLAC, I'm not sure it's relevant. Students out of GMU that study analytics have similar outcomes.
Anonymous wrote:NP. OP is so obsessed with hating SLACs it’s kind of funny. I recognize her posts from a mile away. I’m not sure she does anything other than obsess on DCUM about other people sending their kids to SLACs. It is perhaps the only thing in her life.
I went to HYSP and don’t have any kids in SLACS before OP predictably lashes out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SLACs have very low ROI compared to state schools:
https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-Salaries_for_Colleges_by_Type-sort.html
They seem like a total scam except for the 1%. Much better for your future to go to UMD or Ohio State or Indians or Purdue or VA Tech to study engineering or business while enjoying college sports.
SLACs seem like a waste for all but the wealthy 1%era who don’t have to worry about finding a job after graduation. Many of them don’t have big college sports or Greek Life to generate alumni loyalty. What’s the point of them?
Anyhoo.. If you want to study a 'hard' subject that gives you a job after an undergrad, go Public or top large private (non-LAC). If you want an undergrad education with plans for immediate grad school (law, medicine, etc.) go (S)LAC. Most are unreasonably expensive for what you get in return but tend to subsidize COA outside the top 10-20, maybe 30.
Simplistic advice reflective of ignorance.
My DC graduated from a LAC last year and is making six figures working on data analysis. DC plans to go to grad school for applied math eventually.