Anonymous wrote:depends on how much money you have
if it means being saddled with more than 50k or so debt, probably not worth it
Anonymous wrote:Why do the OPs of these kinds of threads never specify whether they have the money saved or not? It's an easy answer when you have this information.
If the student will have to take out over 100k in loans, the answer is NO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm paying it, so yes.
You might be paying it, but it's still not worth it.
Anonymous wrote:If it wasn't worth it, Duke wouldn't exist. Domestic students at Duke not only turned down their in-state flagship, they turned down generous (if not full) scholarships from the in-state to attend Duke. The connections, competitiveness, resources, beauty, faculty are unmatched.
Anonymous wrote:My child is going to turn down a prestigious school to go to a state flagship. DH and I went to Ivies both undergrad and graduate school, but we are not wealthy, and can't see any reason to pay $70K for eight months of college when a much more affordable, very good option is available for a fraction of that price.
Private colleges, even the most selective ones, have set their prices too high. They are getting the wealthy and the poor, who get FA, but the middle class like us are choosing state colleges. We're paying full freight, but it's so much cheaper in-state.
Anonymous wrote:If it wasn't worth it, Duke wouldn't exist. Domestic students at Duke not only turned down their in-state flagship, they turned down generous (if not full) scholarships from the in-state to attend Duke. The connections, competitiveness, resources, beauty, faculty are unmatched.
Anonymous wrote:I would have figured this out - how I felt - before my kid applied
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of Duke (#8) are residents who turned down:
UVA #24
UNC #30
Clemson #66
Georgia #56
Florida #50
I went to one of these instead of Duke.
It's one of the biggest regrets of my life.
Audible laughter. I'm sorry, why? They're all respected and if you finish in the top quartile you're destined for a solid job and/or good grad program.
Anonymous wrote:How rich do you have to be for this not to matter? Because there are thousands of VA, NC, SC, FL, GA residents at Duke that turned down damn good flagships.