Anonymous wrote:Hi all. Thanks for your input. We have $120K saved in a 529/other savings vehicles, are comfortable paying $25K out of pocket, and the rest would need to be made up elsewhere- so about $15K/year. We are in that donut hole of no aid received, but can't pay full price. IF she goes to Yale, med school would obviously not be covered. BU, some of it would be covered.
She has took organic chemistry at Northwestern and liked it and is very certain pre-Med is the way she wants to go, but you're right...there is a chance that could change.
Anonymous wrote:Hi all. Thanks for your input. We have $120K saved in a 529/other savings vehicles, are comfortable paying $25K out of pocket, and the rest would need to be made up elsewhere- so about $15K/year. We are in that donut hole of no aid received, but can't pay full price. IF she goes to Yale, med school would obviously not be covered. BU, some of it would be covered.
She has took organic chemistry at Northwestern and liked it and is very certain pre-Med is the way she wants to go, but you're right...there is a chance that could change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding ? BU! Have you looked at now expensive med school is ?
+1 four years of undergrad four years of med school three to four years of residency maybe one year of fellowship you seriously don't want to start off 250k in debt. As for those people saying he may change his mind about med school we don't know. OP knows her son, but starting off in debt after undergraduate is a recipe for disaster and BU is not a bad school no matter how magical Yale may be, and I say this as an Ivy League graduate.
All I know is the Harvard doctor got into the same competitive residency as the doctor from state school, a brand name undergrad gives you only a very slight edge up for med school.
If DC wants to be a community physician, there is no competitive advantage in going to a better college. But, if DC is interested in more than practice then college matters a lot. It's the same as law school. If all you want to do is be a lawyer, you can go anywhere and get into Suffolk Law and pass the bar. But, if you want to be a legal scholar, appellate judge, etc. going to an elite law school and an elite college matter a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact your kid wants to be a doctor changes the equation. Yale is helpful to get into professions such as i banking or start ups. Med school don't care whether it's Yale or BU, they care about the MCATS and gpa. I would take the full scholarship, your kid is going to want to keep loans down if he or she is going to med school and avoid being half a million in debt by the time they are done.
I know tons of people in a competitive medicine field and most of them did not go to ivy leagues. Now if your kid wanted to do a start up or banking or another field then the equation changes again, but as a wannabe doctor whatever school works as long as grades are good and super important to keep student loans down since you'll be studying for a long long time not earning any money. I know doctors with a ton of student loans that can't even hug houses in their mid thirties.
But what if he changes his mind like so many college kids do? I too was premed until I bombed organic chemistry, as were most of my friends.
OP, your child should do whatever gives him the most options long term. I think that's Yale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding ? BU! Have you looked at now expensive med school is ?
+1 four years of undergrad four years of med school three to four years of residency maybe one year of fellowship you seriously don't want to start off 250k in debt. As for those people saying he may change his mind about med school we don't know. OP knows her son, but starting off in debt after undergraduate is a recipe for disaster and BU is not a bad school no matter how magical Yale may be, and I say this as an Ivy League graduate.
All I know is the Harvard doctor got into the same competitive residency as the doctor from state school, a brand name undergrad gives you only a very slight edge up for med school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding ? BU! Have you looked at now expensive med school is ?
+1 four years of undergrad four years of med school three to four years of residency maybe one year of fellowship you seriously don't want to start off 250k in debt. As for those people saying he may change his mind about med school we don't know. OP knows her son, but starting off in debt after undergraduate is a recipe for disaster and BU is not a bad school no matter how magical Yale may be, and I say this as an Ivy League graduate.
All I know is the Harvard doctor got into the same competitive residency as the doctor from state school, a brand name undergrad gives you only a very slight edge up for med school.
The 250k in debt turns out to be trivial for the doctors that I have known.
Er, my pediatrician husband regrets the debt. He brings home <$150 per year which doesn't get you very far around NOVA with cost of living.
Is that typical for a pediatrician in NoVA?