Anonymous wrote:Medicine SUCKS in America. Both my husband and I are MDs. The corporate overtaking of the medical field makes it MISERABLE. Have fun all you future doctors! Our kids are avoiding medicine like the plague. Look at how we were treated during Covid. No wonder there is a shortage.
Anonymous wrote:The people who are REALLY popping the champagne corks are current students at Einstein. Every current student is being reimbursed this semester's tuition! And the no tuition policy applies going forward. So, if you are a current first year student, you'll end up paying only for your first semester of med school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/albert-einstein-college-medicine-offer-185317271.html
They are offering free tuition after receiving a $1billion gift.
Now that's how colleges should be using endowments.
This gift is silly. Modern medical students are pretty much the most affluent cohort of college students -- both by family net worth and projected future HHI -- so they get to hoard even more of their wealth? This only benefits the largely UMC and rich medical students and the rich insider "money managers" who get to skim millions off the principal investment forever.
it also encourages people from middle and lower class to go into medical school.
We need more doctors, but mostly in non specialized fields.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/albert-einstein-college-medicine-offer-185317271.html
They are offering free tuition after receiving a $1billion gift.
Now that's how colleges should be using endowments.
Because the person donating often dictates how their money must be used. Same situation here. This is not some wonderful thing the school decided, it's the wonderful thing the gift giver did.
I know, but the schools should insist on it.
If they do the donor can/will go elsewhere. I want to give you $1Β and you want the school to insist how it’s spent? 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/albert-einstein-college-medicine-offer-185317271.html
They are offering free tuition after receiving a $1billion gift.
Now that's how colleges should be using endowments.
This gift is silly. Modern medical students are pretty much the most affluent cohort of college students -- both by family net worth and projected future HHI -- so they get to hoard even more of their wealth? This only benefits the largely UMC and rich medical students and the rich insider "money managers" who get to skim millions off the principal investment forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/albert-einstein-college-medicine-offer-185317271.html
They are offering free tuition after receiving a $1billion gift.
Now that's how colleges should be using endowments.
Because the person donating often dictates how their money must be used. Same situation here. This is not some wonderful thing the school decided, it's the wonderful thing the gift giver did.
I know, but the schools should insist on it.
Anonymous wrote:DH's alma mater! This is outstanding news for future Einstein grads and will hopefully encourage more bright kids to go into medicine. FWIW DH graduated from Einstein with 250K in debt (which we have thankfully paid off).
Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/albert-einstein-college-medicine-offer-185317271.html
They are offering free tuition after receiving a $1billion gift.
Now that's how colleges should be using endowments.
Anonymous wrote:I’d be more thrilled if the takers were guaranteeing they’d go into general practice, pediatrics, etc.
But when they all go into orthopedics or other high-paying specialties and end up making buckets of money anyway….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d be more thrilled if the takers were guaranteeing they’d go into general practice, pediatrics, etc.
But when they all go into orthopedics or other high-paying specialties and end up making buckets of money anyway….
Yeah, it would be nice to seem some public interest or commitment to lower paying specialities that are needed to get in.
Anonymous wrote:I’d be more thrilled if the takers were guaranteeing they’d go into general practice, pediatrics, etc.
But when they all go into orthopedics or other high-paying specialties and end up making buckets of money anyway….