Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to UVA for undergrad and law school. It's an awesome school. If my kid gets into Columbia and UVA, I would pay for Columbia, bc Columbia is a better undergrad than UVA. Columbia opens doors that UVA does not. How could you ever say you wouldn't pay for the better school? I could pay cash for her tuition, but even if I couldn't -- if I was the poors -- I would take out loans, beg on the street, I would do ANYTHING to get the $. That so many would be unwilling to do so is a terrific indication of why you are middle class in the first place -- you will not do whatever it takes to get to the top. Sad you condemn your kids to your life of meritocracy.
+1
I thought it was pretty much a given that parents would do whatever it takes to help their children get ahead. I'd be willing to eat beans to send my kid to Columbia.
I love the elitist on DCUM, always classy. In many fields, Ivy League really doesn't mean much. Spending a ton of money on college is often a bad move financially. That extra 200k that you saved could end up being over a million if you invest it instead. And that is money that you might need for retirement or maybe your kids inheritance.
+1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to UVA for undergrad and law school. It's an awesome school. If my kid gets into Columbia and UVA, I would pay for Columbia, bc Columbia is a better undergrad than UVA. Columbia opens doors that UVA does not. How could you ever say you wouldn't pay for the better school? I could pay cash for her tuition, but even if I couldn't -- if I was the poors -- I would take out loans, beg on the street, I would do ANYTHING to get the $. That so many would be unwilling to do so is a terrific indication of why you are middle class in the first place -- you will not do whatever it takes to get to the top. Sad you condemn your kids to your life of meritocracy.
+1
I thought it was pretty much a given that parents would do whatever it takes to help their children get ahead. I'd be willing to eat beans to send my kid to Columbia.
I love the elitist on DCUM, always classy. In many fields, Ivy League really doesn't mean much. Spending a ton of money on college is often a bad move financially. That extra 200k that you saved could end up being over a million if you invest it instead. And that is money that you might need for retirement or maybe your kids inheritance.
\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to UVA for undergrad and law school. It's an awesome school. If my kid gets into Columbia and UVA, I would pay for Columbia, bc Columbia is a better undergrad than UVA. Columbia opens doors that UVA does not. How could you ever say you wouldn't pay for the better school? I could pay cash for her tuition, but even if I couldn't -- if I was the poors -- I would take out loans, beg on the street, I would do ANYTHING to get the $. That so many would be unwilling to do so is a terrific indication of why you are middle class in the first place -- you will not do whatever it takes to get to the top. Sad you condemn your kids to your life of meritocracy.
+1
I thought it was pretty much a given that parents would do whatever it takes to help their children get ahead. I'd be willing to eat beans to send my kid to Columbia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to UVA for undergrad and law school. It's an awesome school. If my kid gets into Columbia and UVA, I would pay for Columbia, bc Columbia is a better undergrad than UVA. Columbia opens doors that UVA does not. How could you ever say you wouldn't pay for the better school? I could pay cash for her tuition, but even if I couldn't -- if I was the poors -- I would take out loans, beg on the street, I would do ANYTHING to get the $. That so many would be unwilling to do so is a terrific indication of why you are middle class in the first place -- you will not do whatever it takes to get to the top. Sad you condemn your kids to your life of meritocracy.
+1
I thought it was pretty much a given that parents would do whatever it takes to help their children get ahead. I'd be willing to eat beans to send my kid to Columbia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there REALLY college-educated, professional adults who work full-time who cannot afford $6k a month to pay for their kid to go to an Ivy League school? Unless you got stuck with a stay-at-home or have 5 kids, this is unfathomable to me.
+ 1
Is this a joke? You think every educated professional has an extra $60k a year after taxes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there REALLY college-educated, professional adults who work full-time who cannot afford $6k a month to pay for their kid to go to an Ivy League school? Unless you got stuck with a stay-at-home or have 5 kids, this is unfathomable to me.
+ 1
Anonymous wrote:Are there REALLY college-educated, professional adults who work full-time who cannot afford $6k a month to pay for their kid to go to an Ivy League school? Unless you got stuck with a stay-at-home or have 5 kids, this is unfathomable to me.
Anonymous wrote:Colleges and some state legislatures are waking up to the problem. Univ of Michigan is the latest example - free tuition for in/ state students from families making less than $65K
Anonymous wrote:Are there REALLY college-educated, professional adults who work full-time who cannot afford $6k a month to pay for their kid to go to an Ivy League school? Unless you got stuck with a stay-at-home or have 5 kids, this is unfathomable to me.
Anonymous wrote:Are there REALLY college-educated, professional adults who work full-time who cannot afford $6k a month to pay for their kid to go to an Ivy League school? Unless you got stuck with a stay-at-home or have 5 kids, this is unfathomable to me.
Anonymous wrote:I'm from a family of Columbia grads (parents, grandparents, some aunts, uncles, cousins). Like anywhere, it's opened doors for some and not for others---some are successful, some are not. All smart and decent people but Columbia was not some magic bullet.
Anonymous wrote:No. Luckily, we raised our child in a way that he would never even consider having his parents go $100K+ in debt for a name.
Anonymous wrote:I went to UVA for undergrad and law school. It's an awesome school. If my kid gets into Columbia and UVA, I would pay for Columbia, bc Columbia is a better undergrad than UVA. Columbia opens doors that UVA does not. How could you ever say you wouldn't pay for the better school? I could pay cash for her tuition, but even if I couldn't -- if I was the poors -- I would take out loans, beg on the street, I would do ANYTHING to get the $. That so many would be unwilling to do so is a terrific indication of why you are middle class in the first place -- you will not do whatever it takes to get to the top. Sad you condemn your kids to your life of meritocracy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there REALLY college-educated, professional adults who work full-time who cannot afford $6k a month to pay for their kid to go to an Ivy League school? Unless you got stuck with a stay-at-home or have 5 kids, this is unfathomable to me.
Is this a joke?[/quote
It's valid point. How often would OP's situation actually arise in the real world?