Anonymous wrote:This is a spin off from FA thread. Post if you are from a family where your parents had join income of 1 Mill /year, but they refused to contribute at all to your education. Meaning you had to pay for your own undergrad, housing and support from age 18 on.
Anonymous wrote:Merit scholarships would solve a lot of problems. They could, maybe, single-handedly solve the education problem in this country. Think about it: if you KNEW your child could get a free ride to school (lower grades, high school, college, grad school, whatever), wouldn't you do whatever you could as a parent to get that kid enthusiastic about school.
Anonymous wrote:Undergrad and law degree. Zero funding from parents.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I am a physician and my parents paid for the whole thing.
Now, many of my friends had to take out loans and that took a hard situation and made it even harder. The debt itself is a strain and sadly, many of them who are in primary care can not repay the loans. Some are in their late fifties and still paying student loan debt. The average medical school cost will put a student into about $250K of debt, even higher for the private schools. Then there was that first degree that could easily cost $150K even at the State schools.
Anonymous wrote:My parents did not pay for my IVY league undergrad and med school education. They are ambassadors and my country paid for everything including 4 trips/year visits to my homeland!
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I understand the value of money, but setting the expectation that you must work , when deep down parents will CYA, including getting you that govt job for $8/hr, is very different from saying to a 17 year old straight A student: no, we will not help a dime, we will not co- sign, and, no, we will not give up claiming you as a dependent because you owe us for room and board the past few years since I married your mom. Now, get out on good luck.
Anonymous wrote:120,000 in college and law school debt for two ppl is nothing!! One law school degree today would cost at least 150,000 in debt. You also built your law careers in the mid to late 90 s wheni had to be a friggin idiot not to be able to get a job as a lawyer. Stop patting yourself on the back. It is a different world now.
If you recall the early 1990s -- when we came out of law school -- there was a recession and hiring freeze going on in the legal profession, so it was not the easiest time to get a job coming out of law school ....

