Anonymous wrote:I know a number of students who have chosen small private schools where their stats were on the high end, and the net price came in well below that of their in-state schools after merit and need based aid.
So, I wouldn't automatically rule out private options.
Anonymous wrote:Philly and Boston are nice cities to plan a long weekend in, visiting a few schools of different size/atmosphere.
So, in Philly, you could do Villanova (selective, private); Drexel (pre-professional, heavy on math and science); Penn if you think she could get in or you really want to see an Ivy; Temple (very urban; your kid would have strong stats and would probably get some merit); St. Joe's (mid-sized Jesuit).
In Boston, there are even more choices, though off the top of my head, they skew pretty selective and expensive.
Anonymous wrote:“ she seems to have latched on to the idea that she will be a radiologist.”
VT for undergrad then. You want affordable if you’ll pay for med school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does your kid want to study (although I realize that 10th grade is too early to consider this)? My DCs major was basically only available at large state schools, so that decided the point for us.
She said on page 1 her daughter might be pre-med.
Anonymous wrote:What does your kid want to study (although I realize that 10th grade is too early to consider this)? My DCs major was basically only available at large state schools, so that decided the point for us.
Anonymous wrote:OP, Pitt is $55K this year, and you should expect it to go up 4% each year. That makes her senior year of college well over your $60K budget.
Importantly, medical school is a financial beast. Please don’t stretch for undergrad - you may want to help her with medical school tuition.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 10th grader. I know that it's early to consider but we'd like to start making mini-visits while we can to schools and I realize that I may be selling the kid short by insisting on only state schools. I'd previously thought that only UVA, VT, W&M, JMU, VCU, etc. would be viable in state options given rising costs. DD does well in school (4.0 at present, orchestra awards, etc.) but it's early to say what GPA/stats will actually be. We are not shooting for ivies or other "elite" schools but would like an idea of what to explore OOS. We visited Pitt recently and DD was pleasantly surprised by campus and environment. She really liked it, which got me wondering why I had cut off the OOS option.
Any thoughts on good OOS which could warrant a weekend visit in the coming year to get a feel for options? Sorry if this has been asked a million times. I've gone through the search function and find it conflicting. TIA!
Academic interests? it's early, but potential major and annual budget?
I am not sure what potential major would be but her interests are math and science. Much to my dismay, she is not interested in English or liberal arts. Law is out (I'm an atty), and she seems to have latched on to the idea that she will be a radiologist. Not sure who gave her that but all her uncles as physicians (on both sides) so I think it was one of them.
I had planned on an in-state budget ($40K per year) but could likely cash flow the difference for a reasonable OOS up to $60K. The 90K+ options are ridiculous.