Anonymous wrote:So can a student who qualifies for FA also receive merit aid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was his tuition at that small (presumably private) liberal arts college? With enough money, the worst student can go to college. I am thrilled your nephew did well and that the school was a good fit. I was also an average student who blossomed in college. However, most people don't have the $100k to send their average kid to a school like that. Just because a kid is accepted, doesn't mean he should go there. Even if it's a great school it's a mistake to go into that much debt or allow your kid to go into deep debt to attend the expensive private school.
Don't know how recently you've looked at prices of small private liberal arts colleges in the Midwest!!
You'll need about $250K to send your little snowflake to one of those charming colleges! $100K will pay for a year and a little more.
I'd be able to take your post more seriously if it wasn't dripping with condescension and snark. Also, those small LAC often award scholarships and financial aid in excess of what's offered at a state school. Not saying it's the right choice for everyone, but your tone isn't helpful.
Geeze, calm yourself. It was neither condescension nor snark! If anything I'm appalled at the OUTRAGEOUS COST of these cute little schools!! They ought to cost $25k per year, tops! PP's assumption was correct, but she was about 20 years out of date. And BTW, I'd love to send my kids to one of these schools, but I can't afford it. Even with merit aid. The price of private schools is completely out of control. I predict many of these smaller colleges will go out of business. The Ivies can raise their prices as high as they want, they'll always have people fighting for places, but small, less competitive LACs are already scrambling to find enough kids to fill their seats, which is why many offer large merit aid packages. But even with merit aid, these schools are $10K to $20K more expensive than in-state tuition at a public university. If you've got the cash, you can send your B or even C student to one of these colleges. I don't and can't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was his tuition at that small (presumably private) liberal arts college? With enough money, the worst student can go to college. I am thrilled your nephew did well and that the school was a good fit. I was also an average student who blossomed in college. However, most people don't have the $100k to send their average kid to a school like that. Just because a kid is accepted, doesn't mean he should go there. Even if it's a great school it's a mistake to go into that much debt or allow your kid to go into deep debt to attend the expensive private school.
Don't know how recently you've looked at prices of small private liberal arts colleges in the Midwest!!
You'll need about $250K to send your little snowflake to one of those charming colleges! $100K will pay for a year and a little more.
WOw - who pissed in your cheerios this morning?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was his tuition at that small (presumably private) liberal arts college? With enough money, the worst student can go to college. I am thrilled your nephew did well and that the school was a good fit. I was also an average student who blossomed in college. However, most people don't have the $100k to send their average kid to a school like that. Just because a kid is accepted, doesn't mean he should go there. Even if it's a great school it's a mistake to go into that much debt or allow your kid to go into deep debt to attend the expensive private school.
Don't know how recently you've looked at prices of small private liberal arts colleges in the Midwest!!
You'll need about $250K to send your little snowflake to one of those charming colleges! $100K will pay for a year and a little more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was his tuition at that small (presumably private) liberal arts college? With enough money, the worst student can go to college. I am thrilled your nephew did well and that the school was a good fit. I was also an average student who blossomed in college. However, most people don't have the $100k to send their average kid to a school like that. Just because a kid is accepted, doesn't mean he should go there. Even if it's a great school it's a mistake to go into that much debt or allow your kid to go into deep debt to attend the expensive private school.
Don't know how recently you've looked at prices of small private liberal arts colleges in the Midwest!!
You'll need about $250K to send your little snowflake to one of those charming colleges! $100K will pay for a year and a little more.
+2Anonymous wrote:+1Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was his tuition at that small (presumably private) liberal arts college? With enough money, the worst student can go to college. I am thrilled your nephew did well and that the school was a good fit. I was also an average student who blossomed in college. However, most people don't have the $100k to send their average kid to a school like that. Just because a kid is accepted, doesn't mean he should go there. Even if it's a great school it's a mistake to go into that much debt or allow your kid to go into deep debt to attend the expensive private school.
Don't know how recently you've looked at prices of small private liberal arts colleges in the Midwest!!
You'll need about $250K to send your little snowflake to one of those charming colleges! $100K will pay for a year and a little more.
I'd be able to take your post more seriously if it wasn't dripping with condescension and snark. Also, those small LAC often award scholarships and financial aid in excess of what's offered at a state school. Not saying it's the right choice for everyone, but your tone isn't helpful.
+1Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was his tuition at that small (presumably private) liberal arts college? With enough money, the worst student can go to college. I am thrilled your nephew did well and that the school was a good fit. I was also an average student who blossomed in college. However, most people don't have the $100k to send their average kid to a school like that. Just because a kid is accepted, doesn't mean he should go there. Even if it's a great school it's a mistake to go into that much debt or allow your kid to go into deep debt to attend the expensive private school.
Don't know how recently you've looked at prices of small private liberal arts colleges in the Midwest!!
You'll need about $250K to send your little snowflake to one of those charming colleges! $100K will pay for a year and a little more.
I'd be able to take your post more seriously if it wasn't dripping with condescension and snark. Also, those small LAC often award scholarships and financial aid in excess of what's offered at a state school. Not saying it's the right choice for everyone, but your tone isn't helpful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was his tuition at that small (presumably private) liberal arts college? With enough money, the worst student can go to college. I am thrilled your nephew did well and that the school was a good fit. I was also an average student who blossomed in college. However, most people don't have the $100k to send their average kid to a school like that. Just because a kid is accepted, doesn't mean he should go there. Even if it's a great school it's a mistake to go into that much debt or allow your kid to go into deep debt to attend the expensive private school.
Don't know how recently you've looked at prices of small private liberal arts colleges in the Midwest!!
You'll need about $250K to send your little snowflake to one of those charming colleges! $100K will pay for a year and a little more.
I'd be able to take your post more seriously if it wasn't dripping with condescension and snark. Also, those small LAC often award scholarships and financial aid in excess of what's offered at a state school. Not saying it's the right choice for everyone, but your tone isn't helpful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The OP has respectfully declined that information (most likely there are nasty posters who would ridicule the school because it's not an Ivy or other).Anonymous wrote:OP
I'm genuinely curious. Whad the name of the college?
You have asked enough times and been given the answer. Live with it.
Different posters asked. What's the big secret? Might be helpful to know which small midwest LAC can have such a positive effect on an "average student." Many of us have kids like this.
I'm not going to answer, however just check out Colleges that Change Lives. There are many small LACs for average students listed in the book and on the CTCL website.
~OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was his tuition at that small (presumably private) liberal arts college? With enough money, the worst student can go to college. I am thrilled your nephew did well and that the school was a good fit. I was also an average student who blossomed in college. However, most people don't have the $100k to send their average kid to a school like that. Just because a kid is accepted, doesn't mean he should go there. Even if it's a great school it's a mistake to go into that much debt or allow your kid to go into deep debt to attend the expensive private school.
Don't know how recently you've looked at prices of small private liberal arts colleges in the Midwest!!
You'll need about $250K to send your little snowflake to one of those charming colleges! $100K will pay for a year and a little more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the OP. Thanks for the interesting array of responses. I was expecting to get flamed and was heartened by many who seem to agree that being a B average kid in high school isn't the end of the world. I realize that not every kid can afford full freight for college, BTW. There are state colleges for low stats kids too. Think St. Mary's in MD, Frostburg or Christopher Newport. There are also private schools known to give a lot aid even to B students.
I applied to colleges a million years ago (1993) and even with a 3.3 from a top private HS, I was waitlisted at St. Mary's. I even had relatives who went there. I got into Towson, Frostburg and Salisbury though.
Anonymous wrote:What was his tuition at that small (presumably private) liberal arts college? With enough money, the worst student can go to college. I am thrilled your nephew did well and that the school was a good fit. I was also an average student who blossomed in college. However, most people don't have the $100k to send their average kid to a school like that. Just because a kid is accepted, doesn't mean he should go there. Even if it's a great school it's a mistake to go into that much debt or allow your kid to go into deep debt to attend the expensive private school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I too stress out when I read DCUMs or website stories like on college data. Those kids appear to have it all together - outgoing personality - drive - clear path etc...
http://www.collegedata.com/cs/content/content_magarticle_tmpl.jhtml?articleId=30075
http://www.collegedata.com/cs/content/content_magarticle_tmpl.jhtml?articleId=30077
DD is shy and although entering 9th grade in September, will probably have a low 3.X GPA based on her 6-8th grade grades at her 6-12 grade school. I worry a lot for her as she has executive functioning, organizational and time management challenges.
Two things she has going for her is that DH and I both have Masters degrees so we know the process and she will not be restricted by cost or financial aid as she won't qualify.
My son has similar issues. We focused his college search on Colleges that Change Lives schools and he will be a freshman at his first-choice college this fall, with a big merit scholarship.
IMO, kids with EF issues are best served by schools with small classes, accessible professors, and accessible tutoring and other one-on-one services.
Thank you so much and best of luck to your son! DO you mind sharing his stats?