Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to public policy school 20 years ago, so maybe this has changed, but nobody paid sticker price for an MPP. Huge ROI for my degree, frankly.
I doubt there’s much financial aid for masters. I think a proper way of seeing these degrees is to see them as promotional gimmicks for employers who are wowed by ivy +.
There is a LOT of financial aid for graduate students, actually. As one of my Harvard professors told me when I was an undergrad applying to doctoral programs, if you aren't offered full funding, you don't belong in graduate school. I don't actually know anybody who paid for their doctorate or masters at Harvard. I don't consider an MBA or anything offered by HKS to be a real masters degree, though, so maybe that is where you are confused.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to public policy school 20 years ago, so maybe this has changed, but nobody paid sticker price for an MPP. Huge ROI for my degree, frankly.
I doubt there’s much financial aid for masters. I think a proper way of seeing these degrees is to see them as promotional gimmicks for employers who are wowed by ivy +.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to public policy school 20 years ago, so maybe this has changed, but nobody paid sticker price for an MPP. Huge ROI for my degree, frankly.
I doubt there’s much financial aid for masters. I think a proper way of seeing these degrees is to see them as promotional gimmicks for employers who are wowed by ivy +.
Here is how it works:
Federal grad plus loans have no loan limit. Students borrow as much as possible, including for whatever tuition Harvard cares to charge.
Student enters low-paid public service, and begins repaying loan at a small fraction of their income. (10% of discretionary income, which is not much when you are a broke LA on the Hill and can be as little as $0).
After ten years, the tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars borrowed are forgiven, tax free.
Harvard and some other elite schools have also replaced fellowships with promises to pay part of your loan on your behalf. Taxable as income? No, also structured as a forgivable public sector loan.
It is quite affordable. See also, med school.
For Med school, an MD can make 250,000+ first year out of school. We are talking MPP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, yes. I went to Harvard College and it is/was well known that HKS is a vanity degree. One of my friends dated an older guy in HKS and helped him with his "homework", which was shockingly simple and childlike. They do a lot of group projects with silly pretend assignments. The purpose of their program is "making connections", I was told.
And I will never, ever forget seeing some business school bros (in their 30s?) doing keg stands at an undergrad party, trying desperately for the "Harvard experience." None of those guys would have been admitted to Harvard College or to a real graduate program.
Do you think having too many masters' programs would dilute the Harvard brand name? Like I know a lot of foreigners like to flaunt their HES master's degree. I was surprised to see how many master's students there are at Harvard, considering it's got a $40 billion endowment and should have no need for these supposedly cash cow/vanity programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HLS/Harvard Med
HBS/Harvard GSAS
Harvard SEAS
Harvard GSD/Harvard GSE/Chan
Harvard Dental
HDS/HKS
Extension School
From most credible to least credible
GSAS PhD should be first tier, but any GSAS masters should be in the fourth tier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to public policy school 20 years ago, so maybe this has changed, but nobody paid sticker price for an MPP. Huge ROI for my degree, frankly.
I doubt there’s much financial aid for masters. I think a proper way of seeing these degrees is to see them as promotional gimmicks for employers who are wowed by ivy +.
Here is how it works:
Federal grad plus loans have no loan limit. Students borrow as much as possible, including for whatever tuition Harvard cares to charge.
Student enters low-paid public service, and begins repaying loan at a small fraction of their income. (10% of discretionary income, which is not much when you are a broke LA on the Hill and can be as little as $0).
After ten years, the tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars borrowed are forgiven, tax free.
Harvard and some other elite schools have also replaced fellowships with promises to pay part of your loan on your behalf. Taxable as income? No, also structured as a forgivable public sector loan.
It is quite affordable. See also, med school.
Anonymous wrote:HLS/Harvard Med
HBS/Harvard GSAS
Harvard SEAS
Harvard GSD/Harvard GSE/Chan
Harvard Dental
HDS/HKS
Extension School
From most credible to least credible
Anonymous wrote:HKS is an absolute joke
Anonymous wrote:This reminds me of the theology degree offerings a lot of these schools have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to public policy school 20 years ago, so maybe this has changed, but nobody paid sticker price for an MPP. Huge ROI for my degree, frankly.
I doubt there’s much financial aid for masters. I think a proper way of seeing these degrees is to see them as promotional gimmicks for employers who are wowed by ivy +.
Anonymous wrote:I went to public policy school 20 years ago, so maybe this has changed, but nobody paid sticker price for an MPP. Huge ROI for my degree, frankly.