Anonymous wrote:So let me get this straight , the kids at top privates are there primarily because mom and dad can pony up, not because they are particularly more intelligent than anyone else?
Anonymous wrote:Question says it all. I have been hearing all of my friends who are federal government workers saying their kids are not eligible for financial aid. But I don't think this is enough $ in income to afford $70K in college costs per kid per year. And it's not as though these families had extra income before their kids went to college - in this area, a mortgage, saving for retirement, and cost of raising kids will eat up all of that income. Where does the extra $ come from if they don't get financial aid?
Anonymous wrote:Question says it all. I have been hearing all of my friends who are federal government workers saying their kids are not eligible for financial aid. But I don't think this is enough $ in income to afford $70K in college costs per kid per year. And it's not as though these families had extra income before their kids went to college - in this area, a mortgage, saving for retirement, and cost of raising kids will eat up all of that income. Where does the extra $ come from if they don't get financial aid?
Anonymous wrote:How do you think they got accepted in the 1st place? Kids who have hooks for athletics = lots of $ to get to that pointAnonymous wrote:So let me get this straight , the kids at top privates are there primarily because mom and dad can pony up, not because they are particularly more intelligent than anyone else?
Kids who do not have athletic hooks = test prep and other support throughout the years.
How do you think they got accepted in the 1st place? Kids who have hooks for athletics = lots of $ to get to that pointAnonymous wrote:So let me get this straight , the kids at top privates are there primarily because mom and dad can pony up, not because they are particularly more intelligent than anyone else?
Anonymous wrote:So let me get this straight , the kids at top privates are there primarily because mom and dad can pony up, not because they are particularly more intelligent than anyone else?
[/quote
Is this sarcasm?
Anonymous wrote:It's actually closer to $100,000 per year at some privates. Times two kids in most families. So, $800,000.
It's ridiculous.
What we told our kids is you have duel citizenship with Canada. So there's that option. You are a resident of this state and we can swing the cost of the flagship. And if you don't like those options, here's a list of the schools that meet all financial need. Go for it.
The catch is that all the schools that will meet all financial need are the extremely selective high endowment schools like Princeton, Rice, Yale, Amherst, Duke, Bowdoin, Stanford etc. Most of these schools are offering aid to families even with $250k in annual income. You just need to get in.
Otherwise, it's merit at lower ranked schools. Or hello State U.
We are at 250k; received no FA because of our significant assets. It’s all about the assets.
Anonymous wrote:It's actually closer to $100,000 per year at some privates. Times two kids in most families. So, $800,000.
It's ridiculous.
What we told our kids is you have duel citizenship with Canada. So there's that option. You are a resident of this state and we can swing the cost of the flagship. And if you don't like those options, here's a list of the schools that meet all financial need. Go for it.
The catch is that all the schools that will meet all financial need are the extremely selective high endowment schools like Princeton, Rice, Yale, Amherst, Duke, Bowdoin, Stanford etc. Most of these schools are offering aid to families even with $250k in annual income. You just need to get in.
Otherwise, it's merit at lower ranked schools. Or hello State U.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s pretty clear OP - go to a cheaper college you can afford. Why should someone else subsidize your 70k per year college???
This is OP. Why are you being rude already? We don't have a college age kid yet. I am observing the kids of my friends going to private schools that cost about this amount per year.
Anonymous wrote:It’s pretty clear OP - go to a cheaper college you can afford. Why should someone else subsidize your 70k per year college???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Question says it all. I have been hearing all of my friends who are federal government workers saying their kids are not eligible for financial aid. But I don't think this is enough $ in income to afford $70K in college costs per kid per year. And it's not as though these families had extra income before their kids went to college - in this area, a mortgage, saving for retirement, and cost of raising kids will eat up all of that income. Where does the extra $ come from if they don't get financial aid?
We got a 15 year mortgage so that when kids started college we would no longer have a mortgage payment. The cash flow that used to go to mortgage payment goes to tuition.
In addition, every bonus went to paying off cars. After cars paid off, the amt that was a car payment went to 529s. We have historically kept our cars for a long time so that we have a bunch of years with this model.
It might not work for everyone, but it worked for us.
Anonymous wrote:It's actually closer to $100,000 per year at some privates. Times two kids in most families. So, $800,000.
It's ridiculous.
What we told our kids is you have duel citizenship with Canada. So there's that option. You are a resident of this state and we can swing the cost of the flagship. And if you don't like those options, here's a list of the schools that meet all financial need. Go for it.
The catch is that all the schools that will meet all financial need are the extremely selective high endowment schools like Princeton, Rice, Yale, Amherst, Duke, Bowdoin, Stanford etc. Most of these schools are offering aid to families even with $250k in annual income. You just need to get in.
Otherwise, it's merit at lower ranked schools. Or hello State U.