Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are MC around 140k. Mine are both at Ivy League schools. Sure they have some rich and entitled friends, but also middle class and QB friends too. Great FA and similar to state school cost. Cheaper at the moment because I have 2 attending college at the same time. They (and many other private schools) still consider that.
#1 kid had been interested in some LACs. Wondering if the disparity would have been more of an issue on a smaller campus. Have a friend doing QB at a Maine LAC. Also have an UMC friend with very down to earth kid at that LAC, so that concern might be more at some than others.
OP described the student's situation as POVERTY. $140k is not poverty. OP is describing a situation where the student regularly had to skip meals and probably only owned one pair of shoes, likely donated.
No, OP asked about parents with minimal salaries.That would be in the 70k+ range with 2 parents working. Did I miss where OP wrote about skipping meals? Why would you infer that? I also mentioned QB (students in families under 80k hhi) for this reason. Families under 100k usually get full COA aid or close to it at these schools.
No, OP specifically used the word POVERTY. Go back and read the OP again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sons roommate at UvA has free tuition because his family makes under $100 k
But still paying room and board, meal plan, textbooks, etc?
Anonymous wrote:Sons roommate at UvA has free tuition because his family makes under $100 k
Anonymous wrote:Most of the responses on here are about state schools for "donut hole families," NOT "families in poverty."
If you are legitimately "in poverty," you are going to get significant financial aid at privates with large endowments, to the point where you get a BETTER deal by going to the private with deep pockets compared to your state university.
A bright kid "in poverty" actually pays less and actually fits in better (as there are more other first-gen, financial aid kids) at a private school with a big endowment compared to a school like UVA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are MC around 140k. Mine are both at Ivy League schools. Sure they have some rich and entitled friends, but also middle class and QB friends too. Great FA and similar to state school cost. Cheaper at the moment because I have 2 attending college at the same time. They (and many other private schools) still consider that.
#1 kid had been interested in some LACs. Wondering if the disparity would have been more of an issue on a smaller campus. Have a friend doing QB at a Maine LAC. Also have an UMC friend with very down to earth kid at that LAC, so that concern might be more at some than others.
OP described the student's situation as POVERTY. $140k is not poverty. OP is describing a situation where the student regularly had to skip meals and probably only owned one pair of shoes, likely donated.
No, OP asked about parents with minimal salaries.That would be in the 70k+ range with 2 parents working. Did I miss where OP wrote about skipping meals? Why would you infer that? I also mentioned QB (students in families under 80k hhi) for this reason. Families under 100k usually get full COA aid or close to it at these schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sons roommate at UvA has free tuition because his family makes under $100 k
But still paying room and board, meal plan, textbooks, etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are MC around 140k. Mine are both at Ivy League schools. Sure they have some rich and entitled friends, but also middle class and QB friends too. Great FA and similar to state school cost. Cheaper at the moment because I have 2 attending college at the same time. They (and many other private schools) still consider that.
#1 kid had been interested in some LACs. Wondering if the disparity would have been more of an issue on a smaller campus. Have a friend doing QB at a Maine LAC. Also have an UMC friend with very down to earth kid at that LAC, so that concern might be more at some than others.
OP described the student's situation as POVERTY. $140k is not poverty. OP is describing a situation where the student regularly had to skip meals and probably only owned one pair of shoes, likely donated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are MC around 140k. Mine are both at Ivy League schools. Sure they have some rich and entitled friends, but also middle class and QB friends too. Great FA and similar to state school cost. Cheaper at the moment because I have 2 attending college at the same time. They (and many other private schools) still consider that.
#1 kid had been interested in some LACs. Wondering if the disparity would have been more of an issue on a smaller campus. Have a friend doing QB at a Maine LAC. Also have an UMC friend with very down to earth kid at that LAC, so that concern might be more at some than others.
OP described the student's situation as POVERTY. $140k is not poverty. OP is describing a situation where the student regularly had to skip meals and probably only owned one pair of shoes, likely donated.
Anonymous wrote:Sons roommate at UvA has free tuition because his family makes under $100 k