Anonymous wrote:Nothing. My DH and I are both 41 and have woefully underfunded our retirement accounts. We need to focus on saving for retirement before we can save for a child's college. His daughter is 18 and we're already paying for her now.
I put myself through college and then have spent the last 15 years caring for my elderly parents who never saved a dime for retirement (which killed my own ability to save for my retirement 'till now) so I think I'm doing more for our kids by doing what we can now to make sure they're not saddled with financially dependent elders when they are just out of college.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing. We have some investment real estate that other people are renting re: paying the mortage on. A while ago I calculated that we would need about $600/month to save up for 4 years at Harvard - for each kid. Not happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$300 per month, per kid (currently 1 and 3 yo). I'm on faculty at a university, with no plans to leave this institution (although who knows what the next 15 years could bring). They can get free tuition if they go here.
That was my sister's plan as well. And then her first 2 kids were not accepted and the 3rd kid wanted to study a program the college didn't offer. Life is funny that way.
Anonymous wrote:$300 per month, per kid (currently 1 and 3 yo). I'm on faculty at a university, with no plans to leave this institution (although who knows what the next 15 years could bring). They can get free tuition if they go here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just wondering for all these people that went to college "for free" - scholarships, etc. - how much were your parents making? I know for me, living in the DC area with 2 gov't employee parents, we didn't qualify for ANY need-based aid. Most of the very best schools weren't offering merit-only aid. So it was either pay full-tuition at a good school or go to a mediocre school with some merit aid. I would imagine that if the financial aid landscape has not changed too much, many DC area dual income families make too much to qualify for need-based aid. So I guess you are counting on your kids getting merit aid?
I was wondering the same thing. I grew up in a different region, a rural area, and my parents had a HHI of about $60,000. I received full merit scholarships to several schools, but the financial aid packages were totally insufficient on their own. I'd imagine it's even harder for a student in this intellectually competitive area of the country to receive a merit-based award.