Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not a great situation in Illinois. There's only one very highly regarded option, it's pretty expensive even in-state, and they let in lots of out of state students to cover the shortfall in funding because it's been underfunded by the state. They give virtually no merit aid.
48.4 percent of Illinois public high school graduates enrolled in four-year universities in 2017 attended out-of-state institutions.
My niece is graduating from a Chicago area high school this year. She's headed to University of Iowa. She was a "high average" student and even so, it was cheaper for her to go there than it was for her to go to UIUC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:out of state pays more, makes up for the tax $$
This^^^ Without OOS students, your in=state tuition would need to be MUCH, much higher. All state schools do this, the better the school is the more OOS/International students they can attract. I'd rather have 25-30% OOS students paying an extra $36K/year to help keep UVA tuition at $18K for in state students. Get rid of OOS, and your tuition would increase alot!!
They don’t necessarily pay full tuition. I know an OOS kid that chose UVA because they gave the most aid of all the schools who accepted him. No way his parents can afford even 50% of oos tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Out-of-states add geographic diversity to the school, especially international students. In top publics, the out-of-state and international students are better qualified academically.
Would much rather prefer out-of-state students who provide national/international geographic diversity over easy admissions for incompetent students from weak rural school districts who provide "geographic diversity" within the same state.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:out of state pays more, makes up for the tax $$
This^^^ Without OOS students, your in=state tuition would need to be MUCH, much higher. All state schools do this, the better the school is the more OOS/International students they can attract. I'd rather have 25-30% OOS students paying an extra $36K/year to help keep UVA tuition at $18K for in state students. Get rid of OOS, and your tuition would increase alot!!
They don’t necessarily pay full tuition. I know an OOS kid that chose UVA because they gave the most aid of all the schools who accepted him. No way his parents can afford even 50% of oos tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:out of state pays more, makes up for the tax $$
This^^^ Without OOS students, your in=state tuition would need to be MUCH, much higher. All state schools do this, the better the school is the more OOS/International students they can attract. I'd rather have 25-30% OOS students paying an extra $36K/year to help keep UVA tuition at $18K for in state students. Get rid of OOS, and your tuition would increase alot!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to my state’s best school in a state with a huge public system. There wasn’t a huge population of out of state kids, but those who were from elsewhere made my experience richer. A, they paid more, which kept my tuition down. B, they presented a level of geographic diversity and exposure to other areas of the country that I was totally unfamiliar with. C, they were ridiculously more qualified than many of the rest of us, which really pushed me to up my game. My college best friend was from out of state and had been accepted at EVERY single Ivy. Chose my public because it was a very different experience, geographically/socioeconomically/diversity wise, and that is what they wanted.
Whether those from elsewhere should be there or not is a separate issue. The question is whether they should be there at the expense of deserving in state kids. I gave the example of California where the top kids are guaranteed a spot at a UC to the point that the UC system has expanded to accommodate them as the population of the state has grown. Others are then added. Most states don’t do that
There’s more than UVA in Virginia, so I’m not sure why people are so pissed off. There’s plenty of other public colleges and universities to choose from in Virginia. There are 39 public colleges and universities in Virginia - popular schools like Virginia Tech, George Mason University and James Madison University.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you feel about out of state students taking up seats at State U while qualified in state university students are turned away? I think it must be hard on parents who pay taxes to support their state university only to find that their own child is turned away in favor of someone else’s childWho doesn’t pay taxes to support that same university.
Pisses me off. We are writing off schools like UVA for this reason. Not playing the game to have my high achieving kid kill herself only to not get in to the state school I support. I wish they had rules like some other states, giving more spots or preference to in state kids.
Oh well.
Almost 70% are from Virginia. That’s a clear preference, and a large majority of spots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to my state’s best school in a state with a huge public system. There wasn’t a huge population of out of state kids, but those who were from elsewhere made my experience richer. A, they paid more, which kept my tuition down. B, they presented a level of geographic diversity and exposure to other areas of the country that I was totally unfamiliar with. C, they were ridiculously more qualified than many of the rest of us, which really pushed me to up my game. My college best friend was from out of state and had been accepted at EVERY single Ivy. Chose my public because it was a very different experience, geographically/socioeconomically/diversity wise, and that is what they wanted.
Whether those from elsewhere should be there or not is a separate issue. The question is whether they should be there at the expense of deserving in state kids. I gave the example of California where the top kids are guaranteed a spot at a UC to the point that the UC system has expanded to accommodate them as the population of the state has grown. Others are then added. Most states don’t do that
There’s more than UVA in Virginia, so I’m not sure why people are so pissed off. There’s plenty of other public colleges and universities to choose from in Virginia. There are 39 public colleges and universities in Virginia - popular schools like Virginia Tech, George Mason University and James Madison University.
Because although UVA rejected my kid, Michigan and USC accepted them. Why would I send them to GMU etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not a great situation in Illinois. There's only one very highly regarded option, it's pretty expensive even in-state, and they let in lots of out of state students to cover the shortfall in funding because it's been underfunded by the state. They give virtually no merit aid.
48.4 percent of Illinois public high school graduates enrolled in four-year universities in 2017 attended out-of-state institutions.
Anonymous wrote:out of state pays more, makes up for the tax $$
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:out of state pays more, makes up for the tax $$
Unless they’re getting merit aid and UVA is generous. Where does that money come from? My qualified kid was rejected but his OOS friend got in with generous aid. But my kid is was educated in the VA system, I’m the one paying NoVA COL (insane)…and taxes. Feels great!
UVA doesn't give merit aid. Try again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:out of state pays more, makes up for the tax $$
Unless they’re getting merit aid and UVA is generous. Where does that money come from? My qualified kid was rejected but his OOS friend got in with generous aid. But my kid is was educated in the VA system, I’m the one paying NoVA COL (insane)…and taxes. Feels great!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you feel about out of state students taking up seats at State U while qualified in state university students are turned away? I think it must be hard on parents who pay taxes to support their state university only to find that their own child is turned away in favor of someone else’s childWho doesn’t pay taxes to support that same university.
I am with you. If it happens to my kid, I will stop paying tax.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to my state’s best school in a state with a huge public system. There wasn’t a huge population of out of state kids, but those who were from elsewhere made my experience richer. A, they paid more, which kept my tuition down. B, they presented a level of geographic diversity and exposure to other areas of the country that I was totally unfamiliar with. C, they were ridiculously more qualified than many of the rest of us, which really pushed me to up my game. My college best friend was from out of state and had been accepted at EVERY single Ivy. Chose my public because it was a very different experience, geographically/socioeconomically/diversity wise, and that is what they wanted.
Whether those from elsewhere should be there or not is a separate issue. The question is whether they should be there at the expense of deserving in state kids. I gave the example of California where the top kids are guaranteed a spot at a UC to the point that the UC system has expanded to accommodate them as the population of the state has grown. Others are then added. Most states don’t do that
There’s more than UVA in Virginia, so I’m not sure why people are so pissed off. There’s plenty of other public colleges and universities to choose from in Virginia. There are 39 public colleges and universities in Virginia - popular schools like Virginia Tech, George Mason University and James Madison University.
Because although UVA rejected my kid, Michigan and USC accepted them. Why would I send them to GMU etc?