Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid doesn't 'speak the language' I don't see the point. They'll just end up funneling to where ever their high school friends end up, probably marrying someone from their hometown.
I didn't speak the language, but I became smoother and better able to fit in while I was there. That wouldn't have happened at, say, UVA.
I disagree, UVA grads are some of the most affected people I've ever met.
So when were you rejected? Seriously, I have two kids there. This statement is absurd. UVA kids come from all 50 states and 84 countries. There's no rich-speak. Go read "Stover at Yale" if you want to understand rich-speak.
NP here, c''mon they wear ties and dresses to football games. If it's your goal you can learn to be a prepster at UVA and save the extra tuition money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Such an interesting thread. For those of us in the doughnut hole (over $180K HHI so no need based aid) but not rich enough to spend $280K for four years especially if there is a risk of student not graduating in four years in which case you could end up spending $350K it is not an easy decision.
We expect to have $180K saved when ds goes to college and can fund another $15K a year bringing what we can comfortably fund to $240K. So, within striking distance. Even if we can afford it though,what is making this a difficult decision is that ds wants to go to med school. He is a very good student (NMSF caliber) and I expect he could get into one of the top 20 colleges/universities but as we know these don't offer merit aid.
Scenario 1: send him to UMD (honors college) which means we barely touch the college savings acct. and we will have enough to pay for 2-3 years of med school.
Scenario 2: Send him to UMD(honors college) and he decides against med school and wants to get a Ph.D but the top Ph.D programs mostly accept students from top 20 universities/SLACs
Scenario 3: Send him to a second tier SLAC which does offer merit aid. He has a good four years but might find getting into either a medical school or a top Ph.D program difficult because of the pedigree of the undergrad. school, the research/internship opportunities available to him.
Scenario 4: Send him to the best school he can get into which positions him well for a Ph.D program or medical school admission and hope the money magically appears.
If I knew for sure that he would still want to become a doctor when he graduates, I would just encourage him to attend UMD honors and save his money for med school. I guess I wish I could find a group of undergraduate schools that we can afford that would position him well for either career option: medicine or Ph.D
Anonymous wrote:Such an interesting thread. For those of us in the doughnut hole (over $180K HHI so no need based aid) but not rich enough to spend $280K for four years especially if there is a risk of student not graduating in four years in which case you could end up spending $350K it is not an easy decision.
We expect to have $180K saved when ds goes to college and can fund another $15K a year bringing what we can comfortably fund to $240K. So, within striking distance. Even if we can afford it though,what is making this a difficult decision is that ds wants to go to med school. He is a very good student (NMSF caliber) and I expect he could get into one of the top 20 colleges/universities but as we know these don't offer merit aid.
Scenario 1: send him to UMD (honors college) which means we barely touch the college savings acct. and we will have enough to pay for 2-3 years of med school.
Scenario 2: Send him to UMD(honors college) and he decides against med school and wants to get a Ph.D but the top Ph.D programs mostly accept students from top 20 universities/SLACs
Scenario 3: Send him to a second tier SLAC which does offer merit aid. He has a good four years but might find getting into either a medical school or a top Ph.D program difficult because of the pedigree of the undergrad. school, the research/internship opportunities available to him.
Scenario 4: Send him to the best school he can get into which positions him well for a Ph.D program or medical school admission and hope the money magically appears.
If I knew for sure that he would still want to become a doctor when he graduates, I would just encourage him to attend UMD honors and save his money for med school. I guess I wish I could find a group of undergraduate schools that we can afford that would position him well for either career option: medicine or Ph.D
Anonymous wrote:Such an interesting thread. For those of us in the doughnut hole (over $180K HHI so no need based aid) but not rich enough to spend $280K for four years especially if there is a risk of student not graduating in four years in which case you could end up spending $350K it is not an easy decision.
We expect to have $180K saved when ds goes to college and can fund another $15K a year bringing what we can comfortably fund to $240K. So, within striking distance. Even if we can afford it though,what is making this a difficult decision is that ds wants to go to med school. He is a very good student (NMSF caliber) and I expect he could get into one of the top 20 colleges/universities but as we know these don't offer merit aid.
Scenario 1: send him to UMD (honors college) which means we barely touch the college savings acct. and we will have enough to pay for 2-3 years of med school.
Scenario 2: Send him to UMD(honors college) and he decides against med school and wants to get a Ph.D but the top Ph.D programs mostly accept students from top 20 universities/SLACs
Scenario 3: Send him to a second tier SLAC which does offer merit aid. He has a good four years but might find getting into either a medical school or a top Ph.D program difficult because of the pedigree of the undergrad. school, the research/internship opportunities available to him.
Scenario 4: Send him to the best school he can get into which positions him well for a Ph.D program or medical school admission and hope the money magically appears.
If I knew for sure that he would still want to become a doctor when he graduates, I would just encourage him to attend UMD honors and save his money for med school. I guess I wish I could find a group of undergraduate schools that we can afford that would position him well for either career option: medicine or Ph.D
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid doesn't 'speak the language' I don't see the point. They'll just end up funneling to where ever their high school friends end up, probably marrying someone from their hometown.
I didn't speak the language, but I became smoother and better able to fit in while I was there. That wouldn't have happened at, say, UVA.
I disagree, UVA grads are some of the most affected people I've ever met.
So when were you rejected? Seriously, I have two kids there. This statement is absurd. UVA kids come from all 50 states and 84 countries. There's no rich-speak. Go read "Stover at Yale" if you want to understand rich-speak.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok fine but you realize the person making over 600k still pays more right?
No one has disputed that claim -- largely because it has no relevance to the discussion here (maybe also because it is ambiguously framed and stated so categorically that taking it on would lead to a lot of meaningless wrangling).
There was at least one PP, maybe two, who were disputing this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid doesn't 'speak the language' I don't see the point. They'll just end up funneling to where ever their high school friends end up, probably marrying someone from their hometown.
I didn't speak the language, but I became smoother and better able to fit in while I was there. That wouldn't have happened at, say, UVA.
I disagree, UVA grads are some of the most affected people I've ever met.