Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.
Not really, because the Tulane parents are focused on their kid. Best choice for that family.
Plus, a kid with those stats aren't likely to get admitted to Tulane anyways.
You can step off the short bus and into Tulane if you apply ED, TO, and full pay.
What a joke of a comment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.
+1 plus New Orleans is just for partying. I would never go to college in a place I wouldn't be willing to live after school.
Biggest BS I have ever heard…..so you would never go Cornell, Dartmouth, Brown, Princeton, Yale….. I see…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.
I hate this analogy...so everyone, let's stop using it. Grad school is often a complete waste of money and only 35% of college graduates pursue it.
Let's stick to the better script...which is plenty of people achieve from any school.
First of all, nerd, 35% is a lot. But OK, how about a different analogy? The OP's kid graduates from their cheap school and ends up working in a cubicle next to one of those average stat kids whose parents bought their way into Tulane ED. Who's going to have regret then?
I worked alongside a Vandy grad at my first job out of a very average university. He mentioned it at least once a day just like the guy in The Office would bring up Cornell. My response was always the same: "We work the same job at the same company."
I doubt that made him regret attending Vandy though.
His old man might have regretted dropping 140 G's on it (roughly the four-year COA back then) if he'd known I paid next to nothing for a lower-ranked school and ended up at the same place as his kid.
So...should the Vandy grads that ended up working at KKR and Goldman and equivalent get to feel absolutely superior to you and other "average state school" grads that were never even remotely considered for an interview?
Vandy doesn't have a huge presence on The Street. It might be more than PP's "average state school," whatever that was, but it's not a known feeder like Penn, Cornell, Williams, Bucknell, Middlebury, and the like.
OK...you are kind of missing the point. Replace The Street with Bain Consulting.
I just don't understand why people flex the equivalent of "I went to average state U and have average professional job and I love to rag on the Vandy person that also has average professional job"...yet rightfully so, nobody thinks it's cool for the Vandy grad at Bain to feel superior to the average state U kid that couldn't even get an interview to save their life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.
+1 plus New Orleans is just for partying. I would never go to college in a place I wouldn't be willing to live after school.
Special is also how you feel when you make new friends, learn new things, impress a professor, and get great grades that get you into a grad school you picked with an adult's understanding of what you wanted out of life.
Working like you headed for an Ivy should lead to a much easier time in college. And perhaps have earned college credit.
This is just the breath-catching pause on the hike up the mountain. Look up, not back.
Mom - you may have guided the decisions but if your daughter didn't push back, you were aligned on the strategy. You could quickly consider if any other schools might remain to apply to that offer "more". If that would make your DC happier about the situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.
I hate this analogy...so everyone, let's stop using it. Grad school is often a complete waste of money and only 35% of college graduates pursue it.
Let's stick to the better script...which is plenty of people achieve from any school.
First of all, nerd, 35% is a lot. But OK, how about a different analogy? The OP's kid graduates from their cheap school and ends up working in a cubicle next to one of those average stat kids whose parents bought their way into Tulane ED. Who's going to have regret then?
I worked alongside a Vandy grad at my first job out of a very average university. He mentioned it at least once a day just like the guy in The Office would bring up Cornell. My response was always the same: "We work the same job at the same company."
I doubt that made him regret attending Vandy though.
His old man might have regretted dropping 140 G's on it (roughly the four-year COA back then) if he'd known I paid next to nothing for a lower-ranked school and ended up at the same place as his kid.
So...should the Vandy grads that ended up working at KKR and Goldman and equivalent get to feel absolutely superior to you and other "average state school" grads that were never even remotely considered for an interview?
Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This reads like a troll post. Maybe it isn’t but it definitely reads like one.
I'm not trolling. I think I really messed up when I see where people get in and we should have applied more broadly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This reads like a troll post. Maybe it isn’t but it definitely reads like one.
I'm not trolling. I think I really messed up when I see where people get in and we should have applied more broadly.
But it sounds like you didn't apply not because you thought she wouldn't get in, but because its wasn't a sound financial decision? That doesn't change with other people getting in. I think you are just second-guessing yourself. I think this feeling will pass as people stop talking about where they go in. The key thing is don't let this attitude show to your daughter!
I am not even talking about college now, and tried to keep it to a minimum while we were applying. But I am a mess inside. I feel sort of terrible for dd, who is fine with her choice but not absolutely thrilled. I feel like maybe going for different schools would have made her feel more special and valued.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.
Not really, because the Tulane parents are focused on their kid. Best choice for that family.
Plus, a kid with those stats aren't likely to get admitted to Tulane anyways.
You can step off the short bus and into Tulane if you apply ED, TO, and full pay.
I don’t have any view on this issue but got a solid laugh out of this comment, thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.
+1 plus New Orleans is just for partying. I would never go to college in a place I wouldn't be willing to live after school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.
+1 plus New Orleans is just for partying. I would never go to college in a place I wouldn't be willing to live after school.
Special is also how you feel when you make new friends, learn new things, impress a professor, and get great grades that get you into a grad school you picked with an adult's understanding of what you wanted out of life.
Working like you headed for an Ivy should lead to a much easier time in college. And perhaps have earned college credit.
This is just the breath-catching pause on the hike up the mountain. Look up, not back.
Mom - you may have guided the decisions but if your daughter didn't push back, you were aligned on the strategy. You could quickly consider if any other schools might remain to apply to that offer "more". If that would make your DC happier about the situation.
Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.
Anonymous wrote:The parents who blew their wad on ED to Tulane with a 3.3/1260/27 will be the ones with regrets when their kid ends up at the same grad/law/business school as your kid from Cheaperthan U and you're still sitting on a fat pile.