Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
All the Florida hate is hysterical. I graduated from a Florida school, and it was fabulous: sunshine and beaches. The degree also led to a great career.
I don't get the Florida hate either. There are some excellent colleges in Florida, both public and private. I think many dcum posters lack awareness of much outside their little world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
All the Florida hate is hysterical. I graduated from a Florida school, and it was fabulous: sunshine and beaches. The degree also led to a great career.
I don't get the Florida hate either. There are some excellent colleges in Florida, both public and private. I think many dcum posters lack awareness of much outside their little world.
Anonymous wrote:University of Maryland any campus. Awful.
Anonymous wrote:I love the way some posters are saying they "won't allow" certain schools. You know how I can tell you don't have college kids?
We have one who has graduated, three in college now, one in high school. My four oldest chose very different schools. Because we are the ones paying, of course we had some say in where they decided to go. But the only thing we said was that we would pay the equivalent of in-state tuition. Anything extra would have to be scholarships or other aid. Other that that, we let them make the decision.
These are ADULTS. You need to put aside your own prejudices (Really? No schools anywhere in the South? How stupid do you have to be to come up with something like that) and your own college experiences (The poster who hates Greek life was so obviously shut out of every good sorority) and let your adult children make their own decisions.
No wonder so many of you have kids on medication and in therapy.
Anonymous wrote:Mr. or Ms. College Professor: Stop spreading disinformation. Top schools offer merit aid. The scandal is that they (and others) offer it to students who can afford to pay full freight. Some applicants need the aid. Many do not. It's another wackadoodle aspect of the college admissions process.
I really do not like Duke and Georgetown. Didn't for myself, don't for my child. Too preppy. My child found a great fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any school that offers DC a merit scholarship. It's a pretty good sign that the school is desperate for stronger students to boost their averages. Plus it redistributes money from needier students to families that don't need the financial help.
Hilarious! We push our kids to succeed...and then don't want them rewarded for it!
I assume you work in the non-profit sector?
Top schools don't offer merit aid. Schools tend to offer merit aid to students that are better prepared than their average admit. Professors teach to the average admit. You just want to be careful that the classes aren't pitched at such as low level that your kid will be bored.
Signed, former professor
Are you the person who keeps disparaging schools that provide merit aid for some bizarre reason? PLENTY of great schools give merit aid. Vanderbilt not good enough for you? Oberlin, Kenyon, Grinnell, Wash U? Schools of all shapes and sizes offer merit aid because their tuition is insanely high and they're competing for kids who get awards from elsewhere and and against much cheaper top-flight public universities. It's one of the more glaring distortions in the college economic model, and it's true, many top schools (and some non-top schools) don't award merit aid, and end up with a mix of kids on need-based aid and kids who pay full freight -- and not a lot of middle of the road full-pay kids who go to state schools and colleges that offer merit aid. There are certainly cases where kids get huge awards from schools that are a notch below in rigor. But to frame the merit aid system as some sort of discount for struggling schools is unfair to the many folks who do benefit from the system, and to the schools that are looking for a way to compete in a screwed up market place for good students who have other options.
Signed, a parent who has had this conversation with several (current) college presidents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any school that offers DC a merit scholarship. It's a pretty good sign that the school is desperate for stronger students to boost their averages. Plus it redistributes money from needier students to families that don't need the financial help.
Hilarious! We push our kids to succeed...and then don't want them rewarded for it!
I assume you work in the non-profit sector?
Top schools don't offer merit aid. Schools tend to offer merit aid to students that are better prepared than their average admit. Professors teach to the average admit. You just want to be careful that the classes aren't pitched at such as low level that your kid will be bored.
Signed, former professor
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anything up north where it is cold most the school year.
Why do you care?
Anonymous wrote:Anything up north where it is cold most the school year.