Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you all think we will crack the $75k tuition a year level in the next 5 years? I don’t know how this is sustainable. What do you think is the amount of yearly income a family would need to sustain 2 kids in private school?
It seems certain that tuition will continue to increase as the value of the dollar continues to be devalued.
It is less about income and more about intergenerational wealth. The relevance of the private school scene for working professionals will continue to decline as less families are able to afford it. The popularity seems to have peaked with the rise and fall of urbanbaby.
In many NYC circles, private schools seem as popular as ever. The ballooning price tag is concerning. I have three kids in NYC private schools..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you all think we will crack the $75k tuition a year level in the next 5 years? I don’t know how this is sustainable. What do you think is the amount of yearly income a family would need to sustain 2 kids in private school?
It seems certain that tuition will continue to increase as the value of the dollar continues to be devalued.
It is less about income and more about intergenerational wealth. The relevance of the private school scene for working professionals will continue to decline as less families are able to afford it. The popularity seems to have peaked with the rise and fall of urbanbaby.
Anonymous wrote:Do you all think we will crack the $75k tuition a year level in the next 5 years? I don’t know how this is sustainable. What do you think is the amount of yearly income a family would need to sustain 2 kids in private school?
Anonymous wrote:Which other TT are like Dalton? Is Dalton unique among TT?
Anonymous wrote:
Besides the college matriculation, what is desirable about dalton for those on this board!
It's not a matter of less or more academic. All have rigorous and challenging academics. It's more about pedagogy and teaching philosophy. Dalton tends to be more progressive in its pedagogy, while Trinity and Brearley and Horace Mann (as I understand it) tend to be more traditional. Think half-circle classroom seating vs. rows and columns as a simplistic example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are parents on this board prioritizing Dalton because it seems like it is a bit less academic than Trinity, Horace Mann and Brearley but still has comparable exmissions?
Dalton is not less academic.
Anonymous wrote:Are parents on this board prioritizing Dalton because it seems like it is a bit less academic than Trinity, Horace Mann and Brearley but still has comparable exmissions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Over night it’s become conspiracy theorists and unhinged super-aggro weirdos saying columbia is a diploma mill? Seriously?
Among the figures that go into these subscores, the most heavily weighted are graduation rates. U.S. News tells us that (a) 96% of Columbia undergraduates graduate in six years or less, and that (b) the same is true of 95% of undergraduates who held a Pell grant (a government subsidy for needy students) and (c) of 97% of those who did not. Fully 22.6% of the weight in the entire U.S. News ranking rests on these three figures alone. Clearly, U.S. News regards graduation rates as highly representative of the overall quality of a university.
One might be tempted to infer that Columbia is structurally similar to Harvard, Yale, and Princeton and has succeeded in competing with them on their own terms. This is far from being true, however. Columbia is profoundly different from its rivals in that it enrolls an enormous number of transfer students, who are not included in the figures above.
Columbia reported to the government that in Fall 2020, over 30% of its incoming undergraduates were transfer students. This is a larger proportion than at any other Tier I private university (see chart).33 Transfer students at Columbia are mostly enrolled in the School of General Studies, where more than 75% of all students arrive with some transfer credit, but the School of Engineering’s 3-2 Combined Plan may also contribute significant numbers of transfer students.
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Link:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/sep/16/columbia-whistleblower-us-news-rankings-michael-thaddeus
https://www.math.columbia.edu/~thaddeus/ranking/investigation.html