Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save in 529, have cash, have kid do work study/get a job to help pay.
And again the question. How do families save enough money to pay for their kids to go to OOS colleges?
Anonymous wrote:Save in 529, have cash, have kid do work study/get a job to help pay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save in 529, have cash, have kid do work study/get a job to help pay.
Op here..
we did too. Could pay for Michigan but still couldn’t justify the cost of attendance as an out of state student. So i guess my question is how do you justify paying 50-70k for a slightly more prestigious school.
For us it is not about prestige - it is about fit for a child with a learning difference.
I agree. But so many families send their kids to expensive salc without merit aid or other financial assistance without bringing the cost down to your instate school when they could get petty similar education at the state school. What I don’t understand is how do you justify the ROI for such schools? Especially when kids go to such schools to study history or philosophy. That clearly indicates they will need to go to graduate school as well or law school or medical school. Do people take out loans?
What's wrong with history or philosophy?
From a SLAC, could turn into fully funded Phd program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oberlin:
$76k a year, including R and B
Paid as follows:
$24k merit
$4k OSCA (does co-op dining, rather than standard meal plan. Works in the co-op about 6 hours a week, saves $2k a semester)
$25k out of 529 (we saved $110k by May Senior year, cushion because costs will increase each year)
$15k out of income ($1200 a month, which is what we saved during HS)
$8K from my kid (he had $80,000 gifted to him for education between both sets of grandparents and my grandparents)
This year, OSCA isn’t happening because of COVID, so my kid’s portion is $12k.
We are very lucky that we have the only grandkids on both sides, and both sets of grandparents opened a 529 or education IRA when they were born and contributed some each year. Otherwise, my kid would take out a $5500 Stanford and we would make up the difference.
Kid is responsible for books and spending money from summer job.
Realized WM is now $42k w/ R&B and once merit and OSCA are factored in Oberlin is $48k w/ R&B.
Bang for the buck just isn’t there.
Maybe not for your kid. It is for ours.
I can see that. A lot of families prefer slac just like they prefer private schools. To them, private is better, expensive is better. Exclusive is better. Then the cost can be justified
Another Oberlin parent here. For our family, it is not that private/expensive/exclusive is “better.“ It’s that a small liberal arts school offers small classes, undergraduate research, connections with professors, and various other experiences that make it worth it to us. Our DC’s specific academic and other needs make a small school a good fit.
Our DC has a $32,000 merit scholarship. We pay for the rest out of our 529 and other savings. We will have some leftover for graduate school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save in 529, have cash, have kid do work study/get a job to help pay.
Op here..
we did too. Could pay for Michigan but still couldn’t justify the cost of attendance as an out of state student. So i guess my question is how do you justify paying 50-70k for a slightly more prestigious school.
For us it is not about prestige - it is about fit for a child with a learning difference.
I agree. But so many families send their kids to expensive salc without merit aid or other financial assistance without bringing the cost down to your instate school when they could get petty similar education at the state school. What I don’t understand is how do you justify the ROI for such schools? Especially when kids go to such schools to study history or philosophy. That clearly indicates they will need to go to graduate school as well or law school or medical school. Do people take out loans?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save in 529, have cash, have kid do work study/get a job to help pay.
Op here..
we did too. Could pay for Michigan but still couldn’t justify the cost of attendance as an out of state student. So i guess my question is how do you justify paying 50-70k for a slightly more prestigious school.
Listen, some people just have more money than you and don’t have to justify the cost.
PP I agree with you but I see a lot of people UMC chasing top tier schools because they think they are buying themselves a better life. In my family that’s not the case. I went to a flagship u and am making more than cousins who graduated from top tier.
Do you also wonder why everyone doesn’t like your favorite flavor of ice cream? This is just as dumb.
I just see money burned in my family that would have been better used elsewhere. Hypothetically if the kids had gone to state school, parents could have given them 100k extra for a house. I don’t think the 4 years were worth it. Yes - if you make 500k per year it’s probably no big deal but it’s the middle class folks that have saved. I just feel like they are being sold a bill of good not real.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save in 529, have cash, have kid do work study/get a job to help pay.
Op here..
we did too. Could pay for Michigan but still couldn’t justify the cost of attendance as an out of state student. So i guess my question is how do you justify paying 50-70k for a slightly more prestigious school.
Listen, some people just have more money than you and don’t have to justify the cost.
Anonymous wrote:pp again, and because she went into a 2+4 (medical) program the merit package paid for 2 years of graduate school
we would never have known that going in
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save in 529, have cash, have kid do work study/get a job to help pay.
Op here..
we did too. Could pay for Michigan but still couldn’t justify the cost of attendance as an out of state student. So i guess my question is how do you justify paying 50-70k for a slightly more prestigious school.
Listen, some people just have more money than you and don’t have to justify the cost.
PP I agree with you but I see a lot of people UMC chasing top tier schools because they think they are buying themselves a better life. In my family that’s not the case. I went to a flagship u and am making more than cousins who graduated from top tier.
Do you also wonder why everyone doesn’t like your favorite flavor of ice cream? This is just as dumb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save in 529, have cash, have kid do work study/get a job to help pay.
Op here..
we did too. Could pay for Michigan but still couldn’t justify the cost of attendance as an out of state student. So i guess my question is how do you justify paying 50-70k for a slightly more prestigious school.
Listen, some people just have more money than you and don’t have to justify the cost.
PP I agree with you but I see a lot of people UMC chasing top tier schools because they think they are buying themselves a better life. In my family that’s not the case. I went to a flagship u and am making more than cousins who graduated from top tier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save in 529, have cash, have kid do work study/get a job to help pay.
Op here..
we did too. Could pay for Michigan but still couldn’t justify the cost of attendance as an out of state student. So i guess my question is how do you justify paying 50-70k for a slightly more prestigious school.
Listen, some people just have more money than you and don’t have to justify the cost.