Anonymous wrote:The new cap on student loans is worrisome.
As in, not poor enough for significant aid and not wealthy enough to painlessly pay in full.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell are people going to afford med school?
Most med school students have doctor parents, it's sort of a family trade. It is very hard to become an MD from a LMC family. The truly exceptional ones get full ride at Cleveland or NYU, but still need around 40k-60k for postdoc or highly competitive residency matching. I guess they don't think we need a lot of MDs now, if people will die from Medicare and Medicaid cuts.
My niece has doctors as parents and her medical school loans total $500k.
That is a family choice. I know plenty of doctors and others in tech who fully pay for med/law school for their kids. They start by overfunding the 529 with intent that there will be grad school/professsional school at some point
Anonymous wrote:we did 529s as soon as the kids were born with a goal to have 50% 4 yr in state college tuition saved. Somehow our financial advisor got us to 60%. Child 1 graduated in 3 years at UMCP with us giving help throughout to end with no debt. Child 2 went to MC first 2 years saving us alot of money so she graduated with no debt also. After graduation, Child 1 lived at home 4 years and saved enough $ and got scholarship to go to law school on her own, graduating with no debt. It can be done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The put $ in a 529 from the moment their kid is born and then choose a public university or a college that is equivalent in price. As for us, we use 529 + bonuses.
This exactly. Lots of savings and realistic expectations given to children.
. Private school location makes more sense for her major.Anonymous wrote:The put $ in a 529 from the moment their kid is born and then choose a public university or a college that is equivalent in price. As for us, we use 529 + bonuses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell are people going to afford med school?
Most med school students have doctor parents, it's sort of a family trade. It is very hard to become an MD from a LMC family. The truly exceptional ones get full ride at Cleveland or NYU, but still need around 40k-60k for postdoc or highly competitive residency matching. I guess they don't think we need a lot of MDs now, if people will die from Medicare and Medicaid cuts.
My niece has doctors as parents and her medical school loans total $500k.