Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing. I don't have any extra money.
Same here. Single parent teacher and I am glad I can pay his HS tuition out of pocket.
Wow, you're fancy! My DD goes to public school.
Wait PP. You're not saving for college but you're shelling out for private HS? Hope it's worth it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing. I don't have any extra money.
Same here. Single parent teacher and I am glad I can pay his HS tuition out of pocket.
Wow, you're fancy! My DD goes to public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 20,000 so far and I know we are very behind. How much do you have and what is your strategy?
As a point of reference for you:
My DD is OOS, at a state school. She is finishing up her sophomore year. We started out with $80K, she has $14K left in her 529. As you can see, not nearly enough to get her through even one more semester.
Would the $80K have been enough to go to an in state public college?
Yes, but not by much. We're in California where in-state tuition is high AND where schools tend to give preferential treatment to OOS/OOC students - so she would have likely had to go OOS or go to a lower-tier public than where she is currently.
NP. I’m in California too, that’s such a bummer to hear. I know the UC’s are competitive to get into, but I actually thought only UCLA and UCB have a significant percentage of OOS students. I hate that they’ve gotten so expensive
California PP here. I'm a native Washingtonian, have only been in CA for 6 years. Because of how ridiculously competitive it is to get into pretty much any UC school, it is very common to see many HS grads go straight into community college and then matriculate from there into their 4yr UC of choice. I know that in the DC area going to CC is considered a "scarlet letter" - but out here it is not at all seen that way.
This Forbes article is a good example of what I'm talking about:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kristenmoon/2018/11/15/uc-admissions-why-being-an-out-of-state-student-might-just-work-in-your-favor/#2f5ee17527bd
People on DCUM won't admit it, but this is becoming an increasingly popular path in this area as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 20,000 so far and I know we are very behind. How much do you have and what is your strategy?
As a point of reference for you:
My DD is OOS, at a state school. She is finishing up her sophomore year. We started out with $80K, she has $14K left in her 529. As you can see, not nearly enough to get her through even one more semester.
Would the $80K have been enough to go to an in state public college?
Yes, but not by much. We're in California where in-state tuition is high AND where schools tend to give preferential treatment to OOS/OOC students - so she would have likely had to go OOS or go to a lower-tier public than where she is currently.
NP. I’m in California too, that’s such a bummer to hear. I know the UC’s are competitive to get into, but I actually thought only UCLA and UCB have a significant percentage of OOS students. I hate that they’ve gotten so expensive
California PP here. I'm a native Washingtonian, have only been in CA for 6 years. Because of how ridiculously competitive it is to get into pretty much any UC school, it is very common to see many HS grads go straight into community college and then matriculate from there into their 4yr UC of choice. I know that in the DC area going to CC is considered a "scarlet letter" - but out here it is not at all seen that way.
This Forbes article is a good example of what I'm talking about:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kristenmoon/2018/11/15/uc-admissions-why-being-an-out-of-state-student-might-just-work-in-your-favor/#2f5ee17527bd
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 20,000 so far and I know we are very behind. How much do you have and what is your strategy?
As a point of reference for you:
My DD is OOS, at a state school. She is finishing up her sophomore year. We started out with $80K, she has $14K left in her 529. As you can see, not nearly enough to get her through even one more semester.
Would the $80K have been enough to go to an in state public college?
Yes, but not by much. We're in California where in-state tuition is high AND where schools tend to give preferential treatment to OOS/OOC students - so she would have likely had to go OOS or go to a lower-tier public than where she is currently.
NP. I’m in California too, that’s such a bummer to hear. I know the UC’s are competitive to get into, but I actually thought only UCLA and UCB have a significant percentage of OOS students. I hate that they’ve gotten so expensive
California PP here. I'm a native Washingtonian, have only been in CA for 6 years. Because of how ridiculously competitive it is to get into pretty much any UC school, it is very common to see many HS grads go straight into community college and then matriculate from there into their 4yr UC of choice. I know that in the DC area going to CC is considered a "scarlet letter" - but out here it is not at all seen that way.
This Forbes article is a good example of what I'm talking about:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kristenmoon/2018/11/15/uc-admissions-why-being-an-out-of-state-student-might-just-work-in-your-favor/#2f5ee17527bd
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 20,000 so far and I know we are very behind. How much do you have and what is your strategy?
As a point of reference for you:
My DD is OOS, at a state school. She is finishing up her sophomore year. We started out with $80K, she has $14K left in her 529. As you can see, not nearly enough to get her through even one more semester.
Would the $80K have been enough to go to an in state public college?
Yes, but not by much. We're in California where in-state tuition is high AND where schools tend to give preferential treatment to OOS/OOC students - so she would have likely had to go OOS or go to a lower-tier public than where she is currently.
NP. I’m in California too, that’s such a bummer to hear. I know the UC’s are competitive to get into, but I actually thought only UCLA and UCB have a significant percentage of OOS students. I hate that they’ve gotten so expensive
Yeah, I’ve noticed about 30-35% off all seniors from my nearby CA high schools go straight to CC.
California PP here. I'm a native Washingtonian, have only been in CA for 6 years. Because of how ridiculously competitive it is to get into pretty much any UC school, it is very common to see many HS grads go straight into community college and then matriculate from there into their 4yr UC of choice. I know that in the DC area going to CC is considered a "scarlet letter" - but out here it is not at all seen that way.
This Forbes article is a good example of what I'm talking about:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kristenmoon/2018/11/15/uc-admissions-why-being-an-out-of-state-student-might-just-work-in-your-favor/#2f5ee17527bd
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 20,000 so far and I know we are very behind. How much do you have and what is your strategy?
As a point of reference for you:
My DD is OOS, at a state school. She is finishing up her sophomore year. We started out with $80K, she has $14K left in her 529. As you can see, not nearly enough to get her through even one more semester.
Would the $80K have been enough to go to an in state public college?
Yes, but not by much. We're in California where in-state tuition is high AND where schools tend to give preferential treatment to OOS/OOC students - so she would have likely had to go OOS or go to a lower-tier public than where she is currently.
NP. I’m in California too, that’s such a bummer to hear. I know the UC’s are competitive to get into, but I actually thought only UCLA and UCB have a significant percentage of OOS students. I hate that they’ve gotten so expensive
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 20,000 so far and I know we are very behind. How much do you have and what is your strategy?
As a point of reference for you:
My DD is OOS, at a state school. She is finishing up her sophomore year. We started out with $80K, she has $14K left in her 529. As you can see, not nearly enough to get her through even one more semester.
Would the $80K have been enough to go to an in state public college?
Yes, but not by much. We're in California where in-state tuition is high AND where schools tend to give preferential treatment to OOS/OOC students - so she would have likely had to go OOS or go to a lower-tier public than where she is currently.

Anonymous wrote:$100,000. DS already knows that if he wants go to an out-of-state school, it will cost him a lot more. Right now if he were to go to say, UVA, he'd be covered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 20,000 so far and I know we are very behind. How much do you have and what is your strategy?
As a point of reference for you:
My DD is OOS, at a state school. She is finishing up her sophomore year. We started out with $80K, she has $14K left in her 529. As you can see, not nearly enough to get her through even one more semester.
Would the $80K have been enough to go to an in state public college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 20,000 so far and I know we are very behind. How much do you have and what is your strategy?
As a point of reference for you:
My DD is OOS, at a state school. She is finishing up her sophomore year. We started out with $80K, she has $14K left in her 529. As you can see, not nearly enough to get her through even one more semester.