Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Community college then to a four-year school.
Partying is fun, but I'll be damned if I'll pay a $200k cover charge.
The higher ed bubble will continue until it bursts.
I think this says more about your personal perceptions of college than others. I went to a top liberal arts college and while I did go to parties, I spend the vast majority of my time researching, reading, and writing, and having amazing conversations with friends and professors. And I left for a grand total of $10K in student loans for a school that cost $35K/year in the 1990s. That education is/was invaluable to me, and I have no doubt that my college experience led me to my doctorate. And if my school stats are right, about 50% of alum go on to receive graduate degrees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if you can afford it then sure throw your money away but if you're saddling your kid with loans (i.e. saddling the American taxpayer with loans) it's really a shitty purchase. Send them to a larger state school, spend 20k a year less and have them get a real degree or a artsy-fartsy degree at a fraction of the cost. Go Tarheels!
How are taxpayers being saddled with loans?
Because most student loans are made/guaranteed by the federal government. The default rate is hovers around 25-40%, so taxpayers are on the hook. Plus the new "loan forgiveness" programs will also seek to have taxpayers absorb some of the debt. (However, those "loan forgiveness" programs aren't nearly as generous to student borrowers as they appear at first glance; very few will qualify and those who do will be extremely hard up financially, probably for life.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if you can afford it then sure throw your money away but if you're saddling your kid with loans (i.e. saddling the American taxpayer with loans) it's really a shitty purchase. Send them to a larger state school, spend 20k a year less and have them get a real degree or a artsy-fartsy degree at a fraction of the cost. Go Tarheels!
How are taxpayers being saddled with loans?
Anonymous wrote:I went to a "top 20" liberal arts school in the late 90s. Graduated with very little debt thanks to scholarships. Would have been a *disaster* if I had borrowed more. But, I'm pretty sure there is no college anywhere worth going into serious debt for, not even Harvard.
Anonymous wrote:if you can afford it then sure throw your money away but if you're saddling your kid with loans (i.e. saddling the American taxpayer with loans) it's really a shitty purchase. Send them to a larger state school, spend 20k a year less and have them get a real degree or a artsy-fartsy degree at a fraction of the cost. Go Tarheels!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if you can afford it then sure throw your money away but if you're saddling your kid with loans (i.e. saddling the American taxpayer with loans) it's really a shitty purchase. Send them to a larger state school, spend 20k a year less and have them get a real degree or a artsy-fartsy degree at a fraction of the cost. Go Tarheels!
Chapel Hill costs $40K/yr out of state. If you went out of state, you and your parents probably paid the equivalent of private school prices for a state school.
Anonymous wrote:Op blanket statements such as that are ignorant. I graduated from one of the top liberal arts schools, received a fabulous education, both in the classroom & out, went into finance & began making 6 figures by 2 yrs after graduation. I paid off all of my loans quickly & find myself tapping into the network of alums fairly regularly. I would do it all over again & encourage my children to do the same.
Anonymous wrote:Community college then to a four-year school.
Partying is fun, but I'll be damned if I'll pay a $200k cover charge.
The higher ed bubble will continue until it bursts.
Anonymous wrote:My spouse: Ivy Leaguer. Her best college friends are: medical doctors, lawyers, Ph.D.'s, theologians, and overall brilliant people.
Me: state school. My best friends are journalists, truck drivers and cops.
It ain't the quality of education you're paying for. It's the quality of your professional network.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking as a college administrator, it seems that several posters are misinformed about financial aid, especially at the most prestigious liberal arts colleges (Amherst, Swarthmore, Williams, Wellesley, Pomona, etc.). These schools have tremendous endowments that enable students who qualify for financial aid (using fairly standard financial aid formulas via FAFSA) to attend with minimal, and sometimes, no loans. In other words, if your children are able to get into these highly competitive schools and you qualify for financial aid, you may actually spend less money than sending your child to a state school under severe budget restrictions. It really pains me to see excellent students from poor families who don't even bother to apply to these schools because their parents believe that the price tag is too high. That is simply not the case.
I wish we could get a median income for the DCUM board, but I'm confident to say most people on this board won't qualify for any financial aid. My parents made $60,000 per year and I paid $40,000 of $50,000 in tuition. Makes no sense. I'm not sure who they were offering aid to, but it didn't seem to be many people.
Hard to speculate based upon the info you gave. First, are you talking about the very highest tier liberal arts colleges (Amherst, Swarthmore, Williams)? Most schools do not have nearly the same endowment as those top, elite schools, so they are not going to be as generous with financial aid. Also, $60K in income today should allow you to qualify for a lot of aid, but there are many other factors to consider. (BTW $60K HHI in 1990 needs to be dollar adjusted for 2012.) For example, did your parents their home outright, have other sources of income, etc.?
I went to a school with a much larger endowment than the liberal arts colleges you mentioned. I think its top 5. I didn't go to school that long ago, but I'm the PP that was in school before the congressional investigation so things have definitely changed at my university and others. They claim now that anyone making less than $75,000 per year gets full-ride paid. I don't know if I believe it, but that's what they say.
Even if this board is representative of all incomes in DC the median income is $100,000 which is far above what my parents made and the current full tuition promises. That being said I get the feeling the average income of people here is higher than $100K per year.
Again, your details need to be clearer. Did you attend a university or a liberal arts college for your BA? Swarthmore, Amherst, and Williams are typically considered the top 3 liberal arts colleges in the country, with Wellesley usually 4th or 5th, each with endowments of over $1 for very small student bodies of around 2000 each. Per capita, that is a lot of money--far more per capita than at a university that serves ten times that amount.
Also, a lot of students don't know the assets of their parents. Your parents may have made only $60K/year, but if they had a lot of other assets which they haven't disclosed to you, the you would not have qualified for aid.