Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not exactly a sprinkle when 55% of Williams students get aid averaging 52,000
Incorrect
My numbers were slightly off, but it's 51% getting on average $55000. The proof is in the link cited above. The point is the same- that is not what I'd call a sprinkle. Williams spent 50 million dollars of its own money on institutional grant aid for a student body of ~2000 undergraduates.
51% is of those who apply for aid. Not the entire student body
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not exactly a sprinkle when 55% of Williams students get aid averaging 52,000
Incorrect
My numbers were slightly off, but it's 51% getting on average $55000. The proof is in the link cited above. The point is the same- that is not what I'd call a sprinkle. Williams spent 50 million dollars of its own money on institutional grant aid for a student body of ~2000 undergraduates.
Anonymous wrote:Just give helpful advice. If I did ask, that means I would honestly want to know. I don't understand why some would be offended
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not exactly a sprinkle when 55% of Williams students get aid averaging 52,000
Incorrect
Anonymous wrote:Not exactly a sprinkle when 55% of Williams students get aid averaging 52,000
Anonymous wrote:I am the pp whose child actually got into Williams. He did NOT receive $55,000. It was more like $15 (about 8 years ago).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was accepted to Williams and Swarthmore. My favorite comment was "Oh, I never heard of those schools". Kept me humble.
Unless you hang with a lot of boarding school families, those aren’t gonna be on people’s radar.
Isn’t Williams the best liberal arts college in the country?
If spending $300K for a degree that will get you a 50K year job 6 months after graduation, if you are lucky. Then yes.
Williams has incredible financial aid. Better than most of the Ivies and 99% of colleges. PayScale puts mid-career salaries in the top 15 out of any college or university in the country. I think Williams graduates are doing just fine.
That is because most of the kids that go are full pay. Elite privates and boarding school kids with a sprinkle of public school kids on FA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was accepted to Williams and Swarthmore. My favorite comment was "Oh, I never heard of those schools". Kept me humble.
Unless you hang with a lot of boarding school families, those aren’t gonna be on people’s radar.
Isn’t Williams the best liberal arts college in the country?
If spending $300K for a degree that will get you a 50K year job 6 months after graduation, if you are lucky. Then yes.
Williams has incredible financial aid. Better than most of the Ivies and 99% of colleges. PayScale puts mid-career salaries in the top 15 out of any college or university in the country. I think Williams graduates are doing just fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was accepted to Williams and Swarthmore. My favorite comment was "Oh, I never heard of those schools". Kept me humble.
Unless you hang with a lot of boarding school families, those aren’t gonna be on people’s radar.
Isn’t Williams the best liberal arts college in the country?
If spending $300K for a degree that will get you a 50K year job 6 months after graduation, if you are lucky. Then yes.
Anonymous wrote:My brother and I both went to the same top HYPM university (or whatever the hell that acronym is). My mom HATED this question.
If you're the parent, the only appropriate response is "They worked hard and were self-motivated." The fact that my father pushed the hell out of us was never mentioned, because, d'uh, if other parents were asking, they too either pushed their kids or were just making polite small-talk.
If you're the student -- something vague about how you're really lucky that you were accepted to your dream school.
And then shut up about it.
Of course, these were in the olden days when you didn't have to be perfect at absolutely everything academically and a nationally ranked athlete to get into a very good college.