Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's good news, of course, but not sure if that helps when admission rates are already very low.
I was thinking more about medical school. Do medical schools provide fa, or is it all student loan based?
You need to go to college first before you can go to medical school. Parents are not expected to pay for graduate school although some do. I think most kids get loans for medical schools. Your kid should be able to get a loan too.
Naive question: how many years does it take to pay off a typical medical school debt?
Also, if my kid decides to go to dental school, how many years of college does he need? What other professional degrees can maybe entail less student loan debt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's good news, of course, but not sure if that helps when admission rates are already very low.
I was thinking more about medical school. Do medical schools provide fa, or is it all student loan based?
Loan no FA like colleges
Not true. Many top schools provide full scholarships to top students especially racial minorities. Columbia and NYU are both tuition free now via endowment.
Are you the Harvard poster? You are really giving OP false hopes. While technically correct, you are talking about highly unlikely scenarios for any students even the very top tier kids. Don’t just disagree for the sake of disagreeing. All my kid’s classmates in her medical school are either on loans, MD/PhD, or parents paid. Even URM kids with lower HHI families. Most Other schools are no different. Hope is good, false hope isn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your hhi?
about 90k
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your hhi?
about 90k
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's good news, of course, but not sure if that helps when admission rates are already very low.
I was thinking more about medical school. Do medical schools provide fa, or is it all student loan based?
Loan no FA like colleges
Not true. Many top schools provide full scholarships to top students especially racial minorities. Columbia and NYU are both tuition free now via endowment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you an immigrant? My parents were and I got here in high school. 0 savings, all I worked at Jack in Box I gave to my parents to pay the bills. I went to college with scholarships AND lots of loans. Then I went to law school with lots of loans. Then I chose to work in federal government and am now in the highest payment and it will be 10 years of public service and my loans will be forgiven. Your child is not doomed but also not blessed like the rich are. You’ll figure out and so will your kid and he’ll enviously watch his peers do something else they love or travel the world bc they were rich and their parents paid it all and they have loans. But that’s another story…
Yes, an immigrant. The loans really scare me as I am myself drowning in cc debt. In my home country, my kid could probably get into medical school with full scholarship so I have a big question about whether he should go there and get free education or stay for the loan-laden American dream
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's good news, of course, but not sure if that helps when admission rates are already very low.
I was thinking more about medical school. Do medical schools provide fa, or is it all student loan based?
Loan no FA like colleges
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your hhi?
about 90k
You will qualify for a full ride from all top tier schools like ivies with this hhi. Just pick any top 50 private school and check qualifications for their financial aid. It is all need based.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not normally DCUM advice but another path is the US Military. Four years of active duty will get you GI bill. You also will have a more mature you entering college. And like being selected for anything they will place you in an MOS - from flight mechanic to cook - with a lot depending on your ASFAB score.