Anonymous wrote:It's all about the money. Schools offer wildly different financial aid. A lower-income student needs to apply to the usual range of schools (reach, match, safety), but they all need to be schools that offer generous need based aid. Do some research, use the calculators on college website, don't get too attached until you see the fin aid package. Do your FAFSA and CSS profile early. Show interest in the school by interviewing (and really try to visit if possible). See if the colleges have fly out programs for minority or low income students, if they do, apply. Small school are more likely to give great financial aid to students who seem very interested. If you don't get enough money, CC and then transfer is a good backup plan.
Money's a big deal, but setting your kid up first to have a chance at admission and secondly to succeed if admitted matters as well. And you may not be able to count on your DC's high school to do that for you in that way that people at private and affluent public schools can. (And even they don't.)
If they're available/appropriate, you might consider some community college courses now -- as a step toward college readiness at a better school after graduation from HS. Again, BTDT.