Anonymous wrote:A lot of people here didn't have kids in college for true emergencies.
When COVID first hit and we didn't understand it, some colleges gave a day or two of notice before shutting down dorms.
During disasters, you can't expect a college to find alternative accommodations for thousands of students.
If you have a ton of ready cash, you can throw money at these problems, of course.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really have no dog in this fight, but it's hilarious that people can't see the difference in paying tens of thousands for tuition that can be funded by loans and needing to pay cash for plane tickets.
You fly to school in August and fly home in Dec, back in Jan and home in May. 2 roundtrip tickets, maybe 3 if dorms close for spring break.
Or you find friends to stay with over spring break.
Purchase those tickets in advance to get discounts. We are not talking $10K. More likely only $2K max. It's more about the parent wanting control---the need to "get to them" and to "visit".
So, not Thanksgiving together.
Also, Xmas and summer are high traveling times, so airfare can be very expensive, especially to popular destinations like LAX.
Then you have to pay to ship everything over ever year, then back because you cannot leave your stuff in the dorms.
So you are looking at more than $2K + the hassle, delays, etc. Flying is much more cumbersome these days than driving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really have no dog in this fight, but it's hilarious that people can't see the difference in paying tens of thousands for tuition that can be funded by loans and needing to pay cash for plane tickets.
You fly to school in August and fly home in Dec, back in Jan and home in May. 2 roundtrip tickets, maybe 3 if dorms close for spring break.
Or you find friends to stay with over spring break.
Purchase those tickets in advance to get discounts. We are not talking $10K. More likely only $2K max. It's more about the parent wanting control---the need to "get to them" and to "visit".
So, not Thanksgiving together.
Also, Xmas and summer are high traveling times, so airfare can be very expensive, especially to popular destinations like LAX.
Then you have to pay to ship everything over ever year, then back because you cannot leave your stuff in the dorms.
So you are looking at more than $2K + the hassle, delays, etc. Flying is much more cumbersome these days than driving.
DP. Students living far away from college typically never, ever ship things home for summers - shipping indeed is too expensive. They store them in storage units ($60/mo or less if shared) or friends' basements.
Flying can be cumbersome sometimes. It just depends. (Currently have 3 kids in college who fly to/from. The farther one sometimes has stayed at school for Thanksgiving and was not alone.) Buy plane tickets carefully and keep baggage fees (or not, Southwest) in mind when pricing. It's not impossible.
Larger airports like LAX are typically less expensive to fly in/out of.
Again, any additional travel cost should be added to the cost of attendance to be compared to OP's budget. Cost in and of itself is not a reason to limit distance, as indeed a farther college could easily end up cheaper than a closer one, with so many other variables in computing college costs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, it’s fully reasonable. DCUM is not at all representative of most parents.
Agree. I truly wanted to hug my son's college counselor at his high school when we had our parent-student meeting. Out of the blue my son started entertaining schools in California -which for govt/international relations given what's offered in this area is ridiculous on its own. Counselor also has a rising Senior and right out of his mouth was that that is crazy and that the flight cost and inconvenience, etc. It was great for him to hear from a someone else. We told him --hey grad school or professional school you are free to do what you want.
But, nah, no Cali for undergrad.
Actually it's rather sad a HS counselor felt the need to interject their OPINION on this. Most kids are capable of being a 6 hour flight from home and will do just fine.
+1
That counselor was out of line.
Not at all. As parents, we loved that he was going over everything- including finances, location, size, type of campus. It is a private HS so more like a private counselor.
You loved it because you wanted some other adult to support your telling your kids to stay close to home. Had you wanted your kid to love your alma matter 2K miles away or any school that far away, you might think the counselor was out of line.
Sure you point out the realities, and our College counselor required our kid to apply to one true safety (80%+ acceptance rate) within 6 hour drive from home just in case circumstances change, or our kid gets cold feet about going away to school. So we did that, but had no intention of actually attending that school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, it’s fully reasonable. DCUM is not at all representative of most parents.
Agree. I truly wanted to hug my son's college counselor at his high school when we had our parent-student meeting. Out of the blue my son started entertaining schools in California -which for govt/international relations given what's offered in this area is ridiculous on its own. Counselor also has a rising Senior and right out of his mouth was that that is crazy and that the flight cost and inconvenience, etc. It was great for him to hear from a someone else. We told him --hey grad school or professional school you are free to do what you want.
But, nah, no Cali for undergrad.
Actually it's rather sad a HS counselor felt the need to interject their OPINION on this. Most kids are capable of being a 6 hour flight from home and will do just fine.
+1
That counselor was out of line.
Not at all. As parents, we loved that he was going over everything- including finances, location, size, type of campus. It is a private HS so more like a private counselor.
You said the counselor called it "crazy." That's inappropriate. Private schools can get away with a lot of abuses.
+1000
The counselor should just point out what life might be like if you attend a school that far away---ie. more challenging to get home for a 3-4 day fall break. But calling it "crazy" is completely out of line.
Anonymous wrote:Be upfront. Give them a budget. Help them calculate the cost differences. But, don't use cost as an excuse for some other reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, it’s fully reasonable. DCUM is not at all representative of most parents.
Agree. I truly wanted to hug my son's college counselor at his high school when we had our parent-student meeting. Out of the blue my son started entertaining schools in California -which for govt/international relations given what's offered in this area is ridiculous on its own. Counselor also has a rising Senior and right out of his mouth was that that is crazy and that the flight cost and inconvenience, etc. It was great for him to hear from a someone else. We told him --hey grad school or professional school you are free to do what you want.
But, nah, no Cali for undergrad.
Actually it's rather sad a HS counselor felt the need to interject their OPINION on this. Most kids are capable of being a 6 hour flight from home and will do just fine.
+1
That counselor was out of line.
Not at all. As parents, we loved that he was going over everything- including finances, location, size, type of campus. It is a private HS so more like a private counselor.
You said the counselor called it "crazy." That's inappropriate. Private schools can get away with a lot of abuses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, it’s fully reasonable. DCUM is not at all representative of most parents.
Agree. I truly wanted to hug my son's college counselor at his high school when we had our parent-student meeting. Out of the blue my son started entertaining schools in California -which for govt/international relations given what's offered in this area is ridiculous on its own. Counselor also has a rising Senior and right out of his mouth was that that is crazy and that the flight cost and inconvenience, etc. It was great for him to hear from a someone else. We told him --hey grad school or professional school you are free to do what you want.
But, nah, no Cali for undergrad.
Actually it's rather sad a HS counselor felt the need to interject their OPINION on this. Most kids are capable of being a 6 hour flight from home and will do just fine.
+1
That counselor was out of line.
Not at all. As parents, we loved that he was going over everything- including finances, location, size, type of campus. It is a private HS so more like a private counselor.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of people here didn't have kids in college for true emergencies.
When COVID first hit and we didn't understand it, some colleges gave a day or two of notice before shutting down dorms.
During disasters, you can't expect a college to find alternative accommodations for thousands of students.
If you have a ton of ready cash, you can throw money at these problems, of course.
Anonymous wrote:when parents shell out $30k-$80k per year for a kid's college education, they absolutely can dictate where a kid goes to college within reason.
Setting a 6 hour driving radius still allows hundreds of colleges as options. That is plenty to choose from.
I'm GenX and all of my friends' parents had stipulations on what they would pay or would not pay for, and that was way before college prices rose to their current inflated amounts.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of people here didn't have kids in college for true emergencies.
When COVID first hit and we didn't understand it, some colleges gave a day or two of notice before shutting down dorms.
During disasters, you can't expect a college to find alternative accommodations for thousands of students.
If you have a ton of ready cash, you can throw money at these problems, of course.