Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes - my son is currently a freshman at a public state university and received a significant merit based scholarship and also received DCTag. While $10,000 a year no longer equals in state tuition, as it was initially intended to at least come closer to, it helps significantly, particularly on top of merit scholarships that many public schools do give. I would also encourage people to look at honors programs or smaller schools/programs within some of these larger state/public universities - there are lots of opportunities for a great education at an affordable cost! Good luck!
Any specific recommendations?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t disagree. It’s one of those things that seems so elegant - I had imagined it possibly as a way to defund TAG if Congress wanted to choose a policy fix that lets them spend less money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would really love a Federal statutory fix that would simply allow DC students to have in-state tuition across the 50 states. Quibble over details, but do that rather than give cash.
DCTag benefits wealthy families. It would make much more sense for feds to increase need based aid for DC families to state schools.
Benefitting wealthy parents so they don’t flee to Maryland and Virginia for in state tuition for their kids’ safety schools (not that UVA or UMD are actual safeties, this is just the rich people mindset) is a feature for DC, not a bug.
Anonymous wrote:I would really love a Federal statutory fix that would simply allow DC students to have in-state tuition across the 50 states. Quibble over details, but do that rather than give cash.