Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: look at the National Universities with the largest endowments:
1) Harvard
2) Yale
3) Stanford
4) Princeton
5) MIT
6) U Penn
7) U Michigan
8) Notre Dame
9) Northwestern
10) Columbia
11) WashUStL
12) Duke
13) Vanderbilt
14) Emory
15) Virginia
Why does a large endowment make a school worth the money?
It often allows them to provide better aid, which is most often need based at schools of this quality but the connection to being "worth the money" isn't clear at all.
Pretty sure Princeton gives every student living expense stipends for internships or commuting, and that there and at similar schools, on campus-job pay is quite high. The on-campus jobs at such schools also tend to be easy; the hard jobs like food service are unionized at Swarthmore (for example), to my knowledge. For high-endowment urban schools, kids get Lyft passes. And so on.
Lyft passes and ease of campus job are not two main considerations when deciding about whether a school is worth the money![]()
Anonymous wrote:My child was admitted to a school that costs 80k a year.
10k merit aid
We are actually UMC and make 300k HHI
Major is Psychology.
Other college choice is 40k a year with 20k merit aid. It's not a T50 and not a well known name.
It's hard to turn down bragging rights, but being saddled with a mortgage level amount of debt at 22 (or if we take it on, 62) seems like a terrible decision for a name on your resume.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: look at the National Universities with the largest endowments:
1) Harvard
2) Yale
3) Stanford
4) Princeton
5) MIT
6) U Penn
7) U Michigan
8) Notre Dame
9) Northwestern
10) Columbia
11) WashUStL
12) Duke
13) Vanderbilt
14) Emory
15) Virginia
Why does a large endowment make a school worth the money?
It often allows them to provide better aid, which is most often need based at schools of this quality but the connection to being "worth the money" isn't clear at all.
Pretty sure Princeton gives every student living expense stipends for internships or commuting, and that there and at similar schools, on campus-job pay is quite high. The on-campus jobs at such schools also tend to be easy; the hard jobs like food service are unionized at Swarthmore (for example), to my knowledge. For high-endowment urban schools, kids get Lyft passes. And so on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: look at the National Universities with the largest endowments:
1) Harvard
2) Yale
3) Stanford
4) Princeton
5) MIT
6) U Penn
7) U Michigan
8) Notre Dame
9) Northwestern
10) Columbia
11) WashUStL
12) Duke
13) Vanderbilt
14) Emory
15) Virginia
Why does a large endowment make a school worth the money?
It often allows them to provide better aid, which is most often need based at schools of this quality but the connection to being "worth the money" isn't clear at all.
Pretty sure Princeton gives every student living expense stipends for internships or commuting, and that there and at similar schools, on campus-job pay is quite high. The on-campus jobs at such schools also tend to be easy; the hard jobs like food service are unionized at Swarthmore (for example), to my knowledge. For high-endowment urban schools, kids get Lyft passes. And so on.
Your connection to endowment size is tenuous at best...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: look at the National Universities with the largest endowments:
1) Harvard
2) Yale
3) Stanford
4) Princeton
5) MIT
6) U Penn
7) U Michigan
8) Notre Dame
9) Northwestern
10) Columbia
11) WashUStL
12) Duke
13) Vanderbilt
14) Emory
15) Virginia
Why does a large endowment make a school worth the money?
It often allows them to provide better aid, which is most often need based at schools of this quality but the connection to being "worth the money" isn't clear at all.
Pretty sure Princeton gives every student living expense stipends for internships or commuting, and that there and at similar schools, on campus-job pay is quite high. The on-campus jobs at such schools also tend to be easy; the hard jobs like food service are unionized at Swarthmore (for example), to my knowledge. For high-endowment urban schools, kids get Lyft passes. And so on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: look at the National Universities with the largest endowments:
1) Harvard
2) Yale
3) Stanford
4) Princeton
5) MIT
6) U Penn
7) U Michigan
8) Notre Dame
9) Northwestern
10) Columbia
11) WashUStL
12) Duke
13) Vanderbilt
14) Emory
15) Virginia
Why does a large endowment make a school worth the money?
It often allows them to provide better aid, which is most often need based at schools of this quality but the connection to being "worth the money" isn't clear at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: look at the National Universities with the largest endowments:
1) Harvard
2) Yale
3) Stanford
4) Princeton
5) MIT
6) U Penn
7) U Michigan
8) Notre Dame
9) Northwestern
10) Columbia
11) WashUStL
12) Duke
13) Vanderbilt
14) Emory
15) Virginia
Why does a large endowment make a school worth the money?
It often allows them to provide better aid, which is most often need based at schools of this quality but the connection to being "worth the money" isn't clear at all.
Anonymous wrote:OP: look at the National Universities with the largest endowments:
1) Harvard
2) Yale
3) Stanford
4) Princeton
5) MIT
6) U Penn
7) U Michigan
8) Notre Dame
9) Northwestern
10) Columbia
11) WashUStL
12) Duke
13) Vanderbilt
14) Emory
15) Virginia
Anonymous wrote:OP: look at the National Universities with the largest endowments:
1) Harvard
2) Yale
3) Stanford
4) Princeton
5) MIT
6) U Penn
7) U Michigan
8) Notre Dame
9) Northwestern
10) Columbia
11) WashUStL
12) Duke
13) Vanderbilt
14) Emory
15) Virginia
Anonymous wrote:To be safe, since your kid seems to be somewhat competitive, if they can snag one of the following it’s almost never a bad investment: Harvard, MIT, Stanford, Princeton, Caltech, Duke, Yale, UPenn, Columbia. Those are top schools recognized throughout the nation with good undergrad resources and extremely low levels of financial insolvency for students after graduating. If your kid is looking for a smaller environment with more individual attention, you can make the case for Dartmouth, Rice, Williams, Amherst, Swarthmore. After that each school gets increasingly more difficult to justify. In most cases schools like Brown, Vanderbilt, WashU, etc. are mostly worth it but the previous grouping is safer.
Anonymous wrote:To be safe, since your kid seems to be somewhat competitive, if they can snag one of the following it’s almost never a bad investment: Harvard, MIT, Stanford, Princeton, Caltech, Duke, Yale, UPenn, Columbia. Those are top schools recognized throughout the nation with good undergrad resources and extremely low levels of financial insolvency for students after graduating. If your kid is looking for a smaller environment with more individual attention, you can make the case for Dartmouth, Rice, Williams, Amherst, Swarthmore. After that each school gets increasingly more difficult to justify. In most cases schools like Brown, Vanderbilt, WashU, etc. are mostly worth it but the previous grouping is safer.