Anonymous wrote:My DC was in the same position. Some Ivy acceptances but only modest aid, could have gone to any public other than the top few with a full ride, or any school below #75 or so with a full ride.
He ultimately chose to attend WUSTL because they offered 50% off as merit aid, and the experience has been great so far.
Of course, it does not have the name recognition of the Ivy's. But the people who matter (admissions for med school or PhD program) know that it is a great school, even if most people have never heard of it.
I think Rice and Northwestern and a few other schools are in the same category - they still offer merit aid and a great education but are not quite as well known as the Ivy's or Stanford or Chicago.
But, they will provide the same opportunities for grad school admission down the road.
+2Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is it that you had the money to send your kid to private k-12 but not for a private college? Isn't that, like, the whole point of doing private k-12??
If you do have the money, which I strongly suspect you do, what else do you have to spend it on that's more important? A beach house??
I genuinely don't get this question coming from a person like you. Honestly seems like MUD.
I think this too. FAKE. Just trying to rile people up.
Next.
+1.
Anonymous wrote:Parent of 3 NMF/NMS here.
State flagship is fine but he will have to be more "aggressive" searching opportunities (lab to join, internships...etc.) and maintain high GPA. State schools have no "hand-holding" by administration staff. It is very much sink or swim approach. Some people like it, some don't. If he is able to do all the right things - high GPA, internships, and/or lab work, he will be able to get into top grad programs, most likely fully funded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is it that you had the money to send your kid to private k-12 but not for a private college? Isn't that, like, the whole point of doing private k-12??
If you do have the money, which I strongly suspect you do, what else do you have to spend it on that's more important? A beach house??
I genuinely don't get this question coming from a person like you. Honestly seems like MUD.
I think this too. FAKE. Just trying to rile people up.
Next.
Anonymous wrote:How is it that you had the money to send your kid to private k-12 but not for a private college? Isn't that, like, the whole point of doing private k-12??
If you do have the money, which I strongly suspect you do, what else do you have to spend it on that's more important? A beach house??
I genuinely don't get this question coming from a person like you. Honestly seems like MUD.
Anonymous wrote:Are you set for retirement ? If you aren't then your child needs to take out loans to cover the difference.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. So defensive. Retirement is not an issue, but thank you for the concern. Most parents try to do what is right for their children and public vs. private is just one of the many decisions we make as parents. Neither is a better choice for everyone only a better choice for a particular child. You sound very angry and resentful.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was not a mistake at all. The best decision we could have ever made for DC and we would do it again in a heartbeat. We are simply gathering information regarding whether another $250,000 for college will be similarly "worth it."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a nmsf. #1 in class at academically rigorous private. All the right extracurriculars, internships, national and international awards to be competitive at Ivy and top private schools. We will be paying full freight--absolutely no aid. We can do so, but DH and I are first generation to go to college, do a cost benefit analysis for everything and have spent years supporting family members. We have a 529 plan for DC which would pay for excellent state school in this area but are not the best schools for DC's likely majors--plans to double major. DC has applied to said schools as "likely" admissions. If DC is admitted to Ivy or Ivy-lite is it really worth paying $65000 a year on top of the $250,000 we have already paid for grammar school and high school? This seems so crazy, and yet, DC has worked hard to get to this spot. What would you do? DC will likely ultimately seek a PhD so there are a lot of years of school ahead.
Your mistake has already been made. You spent the college money on grammar school and high school! I pray you don't live in a good school district!
It's probably MORE worth it than private elementary school! College actually matters and can help you land a job after school. I'd spend money on college before private elementary school.
You remind me of my inlaws though. They would say the same thing. They spent at least 500k educating each child. My parents spent $0. I have done just as well, if not better, than my husband. My inlaws think it was worth the money and they are better parents because of it. Yet they can't afford to retire.