Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does your pathetic circle of acquaintances have to do with anything?
Said the UChicago booster without realizing that s/he had effectively reinforced PP’s point rather than rebutted it.
Anonymous wrote:What does your pathetic circle of acquaintances have to do with anything?
Which campus had kids who were smiling during the tour?
Anonymous wrote:Does your DC want a grind it out and feel really smart but overworked and stressed kind of place? Or a place where they are really busy but having fun? That's the choice, from a parent who has been there. Which campus had kids who were smiling during the tour?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think there is any question. Univ of Chicago is now $76,000 a year. UVA instate's tuition is $14,710. (our DS lives off campus so doesn't have dorm, food service, health service fees). He has no car so only expenses are shared apartment and food. Our total outlay was probably $22K this year. Even using UVA's cost calculator for a student living on campus at $32,000, you are still looking at a difference of $44K a year which is in after-tax dollars. We would have to make $70K to pay the difference. Multiply that by four or five years and you have enough to pay for grad school, which is exactly what we are doing. Go to UVA and bank the difference, if you have it. If you don't have it, you should be going to UVA anyhow. DS has had a wonderful four years. Chicago is full of smart kids but it is cold and dark and fun indeed goes there to die.
No, absolutely not. Nobody should pay to go to grad school (professional school like law and medicine are the exception).
Grad students should be offered a teaching or research assistantship which comes with tuition waiver. If you are paying for it, they don't really want you and don't think you will succeed, and they are probably right.
Wrong. Many grad schools do require payment and lots of it. First, DS is going into an M.P.P. (Master's of public policy) program at UVA's Batten School of Public Policy and Leadership. Guess what? In-state perks for all intents and purposes stop at graduation.[b] DS's tuition for the Batten School will jump from current tuition of $14,000 a year to over $43,000 a year. Second, MBA programs also cost a lot of money. Third, after the Master's program, DS wants to attend law school. The tuition for my law school is now almost $100K a year x 3 years. I am VERY grateful that DS had the wisdom to pick UVA over other privates where since we were then looking at a delta of more than $43,000 x 4 years. We've been able to bank the money that would have been spent at an OOS or private so can now provide for DS at the Master's and Professional school levels.
Aid Eligibility
Qualified graduate assistantships include tuition remission and the health insurance subsidy. They may also include tuition adjustment. A graduate assistantship is ‘qualified’ if it is at least half of a full assistantship (a quarter-time appointment, roughly equivalent to 10 hours per week).
Tuition Remission – The in-state tuition portion and all required fees (comprehensive fees, activity fees and, where applicable, the international student fee) paid on behalf of a student serving in a qualified graduate assistantship.
Tuition Adjustment – The amount of tuition above in-state tuition paid on behalf of an out-of-state student serving in a qualified graduate assistantship.
Health Insurance Subsidy – A subsidy funded centrally by the University and provided on behalf of a qualified graduate student. A qualified graduate student must be offered the health insurance subsidy if he or she earns at least $5,000 in wages as a GTA or GRA over the course of the fiscal year.
https://sfs.virginia.edu/grad/assistantships
Anonymous wrote:Does your DC want a grind it out and feel really smart but overworked and stressed kind of place? Or a place where they are really busy but having fun? That's the choice, from a parent who has been there. Which campus had kids who were smiling during the tour?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think there is any question. Univ of Chicago is now $76,000 a year. UVA instate's tuition is $14,710. (our DS lives off campus so doesn't have dorm, food service, health service fees). He has no car so only expenses are shared apartment and food. Our total outlay was probably $22K this year. Even using UVA's cost calculator for a student living on campus at $32,000, you are still looking at a difference of $44K a year which is in after-tax dollars. We would have to make $70K to pay the difference. Multiply that by four or five years and you have enough to pay for grad school, which is exactly what we are doing. Go to UVA and bank the difference, if you have it. If you don't have it, you should be going to UVA anyhow. DS has had a wonderful four years. Chicago is full of smart kids but it is cold and dark and fun indeed goes there to die.
No, absolutely not. Nobody should pay to go to grad school (professional school like law and medicine are the exception).
Grad students should be offered a teaching or research assistantship which comes with tuition waiver. If you are paying for it, they don't really want you and don't think you will succeed, and they are probably right.
Anonymous wrote:My DD is a freshman at Chicago and she loves it. She’s a smart hard working student , as all of the students are, but what she especially likes are her close friendships and the fun that they have together at activities and in with her dorm mates. She likes all of her classes and her professors and she’s just really happy there. It was her first choice and it has really worked out for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ask yourself if the extra debt is worth it. Will it matter when he is 40, will his friends and family care which school he went to 20 years prior.
Well, for my family it very much did matter at 40.
If I hadn't gotten the undergraduate education I did, I wouldn't have gotten into the grad program I got into and my career would have turned out quite differently.
Same story for my husband.
We both have elite undergrads (me Ivy, him equivalent abroad) and top ten in our field PhDs.
I'm curious, how do you know you wouldn't have gotten into the grad program you did?
They knew they would have. They are justifying other people going into debt