Anonymous wrote:Once they move out of the dorms, the $ just shift to housing so pick your poison.
Anonymous wrote:It is a lot more than $600/month. My DD’s meal plan (the moderate plan) is over $4100/semester. There are 14 weeks of classses and finals. 18 meals a weeks. That is over $14/meal.
It is not an all you can eat situation.
I am not complaining but it is a lot more per meal than people here are saying. And she eats out at least one night a weekend, which she pays for.
At my DS’ school, for the cheaper meal plan (14 meals per week plus dining points that can be used throughout the semester), the cost is approximately $6200. And he lives in an on campus apartment with a kitchen but they require freshman and sophomores to have either this meal plan or a more expensive one even if they live on campus with a kitchen.
Anonymous wrote:
I'm a foreigner from a country with free or very affordable universities. I still pay the exorbitant price for my kids' college experience here in the US, with fancy meal plans and fancy dorms. I remind them how much it is compared to how much their grandparents paid for my husband's and my education. My kids are expected to make the most of their opportunities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was in college you had choices for meal plans. That said, if you live in a dorm not all kids have cars to go get groceries.
Plus it’s how universities make $$$$$
My kid is at school where most have $1k+ of dining dollars left each semester. But there is no lower plan. If they lowered the required amount I suspect prices would go up somewhere
Anonymous wrote:It is a lot more than $600/month. My DD’s meal plan (the moderate plan) is over $4100/semester. There are 14 weeks of classses and finals. 18 meals a weeks. That is over $14/meal.
It is not an all you can eat situation.
I am not complaining but it is a lot more per meal than people here are saying. And she eats out at least one night a weekend, which she pays for.
Anonymous wrote:When I was in college you had choices for meal plans. That said, if you live in a dorm not all kids have cars to go get groceries.
Anonymous wrote:They’re supposed to be studying, not grocery shopping and cooking. Dining halls feed college students more efficiently than having all of them try to do it individually for themselves. There’s a lot to complain about regarding college costs. This is not one of those items.
Anonymous wrote:$600/month for meal plan is crazy. What do college students need catered meals all day every day?
What's wrong with cereal and yogurt for breakfast, and sandwiches for breakfast and lunch?
$600 is quite reasonable when you consider the cost of food, the cost of maintaining a qualified commercial kitchen and the cost of labor to cook, save and clean it all up.Anonymous wrote:$600/month for meal plan is crazy. What do college students need catered meals all day every day?
What's wrong with cereal and yogurt for breakfast, and sandwiches for breakfast and lunch?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$600/month for meal plan is crazy. What do college students need catered meals all day every day?
What's wrong with cereal and yogurt for breakfast, and sandwiches for breakfast and lunch?
Are you from another country? Seems like an odd thing to complain about.
Anonymous wrote:$600/month for meal plan is crazy. What do college students need catered meals all day every day?
What's wrong with cereal and yogurt for breakfast, and sandwiches for breakfast and lunch?