Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS will turn down Michigan engineering for full ride at UMd.
From an ROI standpoint, that was a smart choice.
https://eng.umd.edu/careers/employers/salaries
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/median-starting-salaries-mechanical-engineering/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here and her top choices that offered talent scholarships are GWU, Connecticut College, and JMU (OOS). She wants to major in environmental science. W&M is a better fit for her academically and socially. Her scholarships are tied to her double majoring in dance. W&M offers a dance minor and performance opportunities without the pressure of a double major. But no merit. When I said that it would hurt to turn down the scholarships, it’s more the principal than the money. We can afford W&M if it’s the best choice.
Forgot to mention that her scholarships are not full ride. After merit, the price differential is $10k-$20k/year.
You can afford it, but "it will hurt". Hurt what? Not being able to take vacations? Retirement? If the former, yea that sucks, but nbd. If the latter, that's a deal breaker. No one will loan you money in retirement when you don't have a job, and you don't know what the stock market will do in the next couple of years.
If she will minor in dance, which IMO is still a time sucker, will she have time to work a PT job? Because it will be even harder for you to pay for the spring break trips, the personal expenses -- clothing, hair care products, etc.. girls are expensive.. I have a 16 yr old.
I have a dancer, not major or minor, but one who spent15-20hrs/week+ in HS and spends 10+ still in college. She would dance not matter what. It's actually a stress reliever and where she is with people she loves. So rather than viewing it as a "time sucker" view it as the best stress reliever around, and getting credit (minor) for something she'd most likely be putting hours into anyhow
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here and her top choices that offered talent scholarships are GWU, Connecticut College, and JMU (OOS). She wants to major in environmental science. W&M is a better fit for her academically and socially. Her scholarships are tied to her double majoring in dance. W&M offers a dance minor and performance opportunities without the pressure of a double major. But no merit. When I said that it would hurt to turn down the scholarships, it’s more the principal than the money. We can afford W&M if it’s the best choice.
Forgot to mention that her scholarships are not full ride. After merit, the price differential is $10k-$20k/year.
You can afford it, but "it will hurt". Hurt what? Not being able to take vacations? Retirement? If the former, yea that sucks, but nbd. If the latter, that's a deal breaker. No one will loan you money in retirement when you don't have a job, and you don't know what the stock market will do in the next couple of years.
If she will minor in dance, which IMO is still a time sucker, will she have time to work a PT job? Because it will be even harder for you to pay for the spring break trips, the personal expenses -- clothing, hair care products, etc.. girls are expensive.. I have a 16 yr old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here and her top choices that offered talent scholarships are GWU, Connecticut College, and JMU (OOS). She wants to major in environmental science. W&M is a better fit for her academically and socially. Her scholarships are tied to her double majoring in dance. W&M offers a dance minor and performance opportunities without the pressure of a double major. But no merit. When I said that it would hurt to turn down the scholarships, it’s more the principal than the money. We can afford W&M if it’s the best choice.
Forgot to mention that her scholarships are not full ride. After merit, the price differential is $10k-$20k/year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here and her top choices that offered talent scholarships are GWU, Connecticut College, and JMU (OOS). She wants to major in environmental science. W&M is a better fit for her academically and socially. Her scholarships are tied to her double majoring in dance. W&M offers a dance minor and performance opportunities without the pressure of a double major. But no merit. When I said that it would hurt to turn down the scholarships, it’s more the principal than the money. We can afford W&M if it’s the best choice.
Forgot to mention that her scholarships are not full ride. After merit, the price differential is $10k-$20k/year.
I would not do GW or JMU. Conn College is strong for enviro science, but if W&M checks all the boxes (and it's also strong wrt enviro science), I think it is worth it to spend an extra 10-20K/year
OP here. I believe W&M checks some boxes that CC doesn't, most importantly, it's better known in the DC area where DD wants to end up. Her original career goal was to work for the EPA, Justice, or Fish & Wildlife, but since January she's pivoted to nonprofits like National Geographic, Nature Conservancy, Conservation International, World Wildlife Fund, etc. W&M has strong internships in DC and CC's market is closer to NYC and Boston. She also prefers a mid-sized school to a SLAC.
Anonymous wrote:Seems like there was a parent on here recently who was not happy that they sent their DD to her expensive reach, then was upset that she couldn't afford to do the other things the other kids were doing. Spring Break I think might have been the tipping point.
If she can't, that could push her out of a friend group.
Anonymous wrote:Ooh, good question. DC is in a similar situation. We’re trying not to make it all about the $$ but a difference of $50K per year is hard to totally discount.
Anonymous wrote:DD is fortunate to have good options to consider and feels very grateful but conflicted. She was accepted to six schools, five of which offered generous merit and/or talent scholarships. The sixth school offered nothing but acceptance, which was a reach. She’s feeling guilty about wanting the more prestigious school she loves when the other schools seem to love her more. We have the money to pay for the sixth school (OOS public), but it will hurt. Thoughts? Advice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a dancer also, a junior who wants to double major so we’ve been having the same types of conversations, and I would just worry about what happens to the merit aid if she were to get injured and had to drop out of the dance program. Or if she couldn’t get the classes she needed to complete both majors in 4 years. Adding a 5th year with no merit would more than make up for the cost difference. I feel like double majoring with dance is hard enough as it is but would seem like such a bigger burden if her heart isn’t in it.
Have you made a decision yet, OP? The above seems like good advice. Have a conversation with your DC about how dance fits with her academic goals. And how she’d feel at GW if she couldn’t dance/double major/graduate in four years? The idea of the double major is always better in theory than in practice. What will she do with a major in dance that she can’t by just pursuing it on her own/in a less structured way?
OTOH, the poster who talked about how little environmental science jobs pay has a good point!
GW and Conn College are just so so different from WM. I would be inclined to go with her gut if you can swing it financially. Like, with no reduction of retirement savings and no effect on vacations etc. Good luck! Tell us what she chose- hard choice! Nice to have options though!