Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, a friend of mine regretted sending his two kids to NYU. The hidden costs were enormous. Both children wanted to stay the summer for classes or internships, which resulted in obscene apartment and living fees not expected on top of the tuittion, airfare, etc.
Internships often come with housing allowances.
Well, my kids had 8 of them and there were no housing allowances
My kid had 6 internship offers last year - every one of them came with housing allowance
Is your kid from NYU?
Please list the internships so we all can benefit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, a friend of mine regretted sending his two kids to NYU. The hidden costs were enormous. Both children wanted to stay the summer for classes or internships, which resulted in obscene apartment and living fees not expected on top of the tuittion, airfare, etc.
Internships often come with housing allowances.
Well, my kids had 8 of them and there were no housing allowances
My kid had 6 internship offers last year - every one of them came with housing allowance
Is your kid from NYU?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is any school worth 70-80k/year?!
Of course! Do you think rich parents that send their kids to top schools are all fools and you are somehow smarter than them?
Yes. IMO, it’s foolish to select an expensive private school when a less expensive option with equal educational opportunities is available, even if you are wealthy enough to afford it. I also bought a Toyota when I could afford a much more expensive car though. Obviously, lots of people don’t agree though and that is fine.
A lot of people buy Prada and Gucci while Coach does a perfectly fine job, maybe because they are rich enough and/or they really like it .
By your logic, GMU would be the best bang for the buck for the folks in NOVA, however people still go to VT, UVA, W&M.
Every kid and every family is unique, that's why we have many options.
Another key word is CS. CS major has the privilege that you can go pretty much anywhere.
I think the issue is that NYU doesn’t offer the small classes and personalized environment of most private colleges. It operates more on the scale of State U, so why pay triple the cost for the same thing?
I think the reason is that some of their undergraduate colleges and specialty majors are among the best. Stern College of Business, for example, has few peers and has unequaled access to Wall Street. Tisch School of the Arts is one of the Big 4 for film, all of its performing arts are great, and it has ready access to the NY theater and music scene. Engineering, on the other hand, is nothing special that you can’t get anywhere else.
So, NYU is a school where a consumer needs to be discerning. Worth the price for the right major but not for some others unless you have a lot of money and desperately want to be in Manhattan.
My kid who attended NYU had small classes, excellent counseling (much more individual attention than my kid who attended Georgetown) and it was academically rigorous. I was actually very impressed by how much he grew at his time in NYU. He did not major in computer science so I'm not going to comment on that aspect, but academically, NYU is an excellent school.
What was your kid’s major?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, a friend of mine regretted sending his two kids to NYU. The hidden costs were enormous. Both children wanted to stay the summer for classes or internships, which resulted in obscene apartment and living fees not expected on top of the tuittion, airfare, etc.
Internships often come with housing allowances.
Well, my kids had 8 of them and there were no housing allowances
My kid had 6 internship offers last year - every one of them came with housing allowance
Is your kid from NYU?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, a friend of mine regretted sending his two kids to NYU. The hidden costs were enormous. Both children wanted to stay the summer for classes or internships, which resulted in obscene apartment and living fees not expected on top of the tuittion, airfare, etc.
Internships often come with housing allowances.
Well, my kids had 8 of them and there were no housing allowances
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, a friend of mine regretted sending his two kids to NYU. The hidden costs were enormous. Both children wanted to stay the summer for classes or internships, which resulted in obscene apartment and living fees not expected on top of the tuittion, airfare, etc.
Internships often come with housing allowances.
Anonymous wrote:very high...Amazon and VT share space in Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:definitely not worth it if you have umd as an instate option
Anonymous wrote:you intern at FAANG too from VT.
Anonymous wrote:There is a lot of wealth at NYU.
Anonymous wrote:There is a lot of wealth at NYU. I know current undergrads who live at Trump tower Columbus circle. Be prepared for a Very different student body and a very different lifestyle. NYU has NYC as the campus as all the glory fun challenges and price tags that that brings