Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are we doing it? Our kid will have the GI bill from my reserve career. I’m not surprised that the DCUM elite never consider the military as an option, but your kids can look into service academies, ROTC or the reserves.
This is what one of my kids did, got admitted to two military academies along with UPenn and MIT, went to West Point, no debt, great experience.
Yea you. My husband is a retiree but he didn't get the GI bill so that only works if you have one. I would never consider military or ROTC as an option as clearly you went in as an officer vs. my enlisted spouse. It was very very hard for him to get his degree and it took him many years to get it so I'd rather save as much as we can and forgo things like vacations, a big fancy house, etc. to pay for college. It's also very hard to get into a military academy if you don't know anyone. Nor do all kids want to do it. My kid loves camps at the academy but would never want to attend. And, being reserves now and the last 10 years with the constant deployments would be horrible.
Why didn’t your spouse get the GI bill? My spouse was an enlisted reservist and post 9-11 he can give the benefit to our kids (they have to split it). He deployed once every 5 years as a reservist, which was tough on my when the kids were little but we made it work.
I understand the military isn’t for everyone but this thread is about the sacrifices different families make for their kids and ways to help pay for college.
DP here. Maybe he retired before the post 9/11 GI Bill? But now almost everyone can get it. My DH did ROTC and became an officer, then had his MS paid for as well. For him it was a great deal, and he was never deployed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are we doing it? Our kid will have the GI bill from my reserve career. I’m not surprised that the DCUM elite never consider the military as an option, but your kids can look into service academies, ROTC or the reserves.
This is what one of my kids did, got admitted to two military academies along with UPenn and MIT, went to West Point, no debt, great experience.
Yea you. My husband is a retiree but he didn't get the GI bill so that only works if you have one. I would never consider military or ROTC as an option as clearly you went in as an officer vs. my enlisted spouse. It was very very hard for him to get his degree and it took him many years to get it so I'd rather save as much as we can and forgo things like vacations, a big fancy house, etc. to pay for college. It's also very hard to get into a military academy if you don't know anyone. Nor do all kids want to do it. My kid loves camps at the academy but would never want to attend. And, being reserves now and the last 10 years with the constant deployments would be horrible.
Why didn’t your spouse get the GI bill? My spouse was an enlisted reservist and post 9-11 he can give the benefit to our kids (they have to split it). He deployed once every 5 years as a reservist, which was tough on my when the kids were little but we made it work.
I understand the military isn’t for everyone but this thread is about the sacrifices different families make for their kids and ways to help pay for college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are we doing it? Our kid will have the GI bill from my reserve career. I’m not surprised that the DCUM elite never consider the military as an option, but your kids can look into service academies, ROTC or the reserves.
This is what one of my kids did, got admitted to two military academies along with UPenn and MIT, went to West Point, no debt, great experience.
Yea you. My husband is a retiree but he didn't get the GI bill so that only works if you have one. I would never consider military or ROTC as an option as clearly you went in as an officer vs. my enlisted spouse. It was very very hard for him to get his degree and it took him many years to get it so I'd rather save as much as we can and forgo things like vacations, a big fancy house, etc. to pay for college. It's also very hard to get into a military academy if you don't know anyone. Nor do all kids want to do it. My kid loves camps at the academy but would never want to attend. And, being reserves now and the last 10 years with the constant deployments would be horrible.
Anonymous wrote:A close friend works at a top uni and says almost nobody pays full sticker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A close friend works at a top uni and says almost nobody pays full sticker.
I know several UVA out of state students who pay full price out of state sticker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are we doing it? Our kid will have the GI bill from my reserve career. I’m not surprised that the DCUM elite never consider the military as an option, but your kids can look into service academies, ROTC or the reserves.
This is what one of my kids did, got admitted to two military academies along with UPenn and MIT, went to West Point, no debt, great experience.