Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good suggestions above. Chapman is a good private university - would check them out.
OMG super expensive. my niece went there. Not the best academics. Over $90K a year now. not worth it. https://www.chapman.edu/students/tuition-and-aid/financial-aid/undergraduate/cost-of-attendance.aspx
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Others have provided the good suggestion of applying to a Cal state/ Cal Poly school. For example, San Diego state OoS tuition is 20,170 this year, San Jose State is 19,779, and Cal Poly -San Luis Obispo is 26,970. For comparison, UVa in state tuition is 20,342.
I would not pay oos for CSU schools.
-CSU grad
Which college did you graduate from? They are not all equal.
It would definitely be worth an OOS to go to San Luis Obispo
pp here..
SLO is a regional school, and good for STEM. So, if you want to stay in CA, then it's great. But, for oos, it's really not worth the cost. The tuition is cheap, but col is super high. It's part of the reason why so many CA students live at home.
And you will be paying a lot in travel costs if you live in the DC area. We are going to CA over spring break, and the flights are like $850 or so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Others have provided the good suggestion of applying to a Cal state/ Cal Poly school. For example, San Diego state OoS tuition is 20,170 this year, San Jose State is 19,779, and Cal Poly -San Luis Obispo is 26,970. For comparison, UVa in state tuition is 20,342.
I would not pay oos for CSU schools.
-CSU grad
Which college did you graduate from? They are not all equal.
It would definitely be worth an OOS to go to San Luis Obispo
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Others have provided the good suggestion of applying to a Cal state/ Cal Poly school. For example, San Diego state OoS tuition is 20,170 this year, San Jose State is 19,779, and Cal Poly -San Luis Obispo is 26,970. For comparison, UVa in state tuition is 20,342.
I would not pay oos for CSU schools.
-CSU grad
Anonymous wrote:I don't know if this is still an issue, but Dh and I went to CSU/UC schools back in the 90s and overcrowding/not being able to get classes were a huge problem. At that time, health insurance companies required you to be a full time student (12 credit hours) to be on the parent's insurance--and both Dh and I knew classmates who were taking 2 or 3 random PE classes, just so they could be a "full time student" because they couldn't get the classes they actually needed for their major/general ed.