Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember that when you VOTE!
?? Who is going to lower the costs? Serious question.
Republican governors aren’t.
How about some Dems then? Name a couple who've made this a campaign pledge.
I live in Florida and our state universities are already very cheap to begin with (under $20k for everything — room, board, tuition) but we also have a program called Bright Futures which allows students with certain credentials to go to state Us virtually free of cost. Georgia also has a program where high achieving students can go for an extremely low price. Amazing!!!! How about those good Democratic states of California or New Jersey? 😅
Yeah, and you can get a free tuition in Alabama with 30 ACT and 3.5 GPA. But who wants to go there?
No you can’t, stop lying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would save for the amount of in-State tuition. Nowadays, a lot of schools give merit aid to upper middle class families. For instance, only 6% of students at Connecticut College are full pay, and that’s a NESCAC school that is in decent financial shape. You may be priced out of elite schools, but there will still be good schools left. My parents have an education trust for our kids and we plan on encouraging them to not use it all on undergrad, but go to a cheaper option, and then have grad school potentially paid off too.
Source?
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, and you can get a free tuition in Alabama with 30 ACT and 3.5 GPA. But who wants to go there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember that when you VOTE!
?? Who is going to lower the costs? Serious question.
Republican governors aren’t.
How about some Dems then? Name a couple who've made this a campaign pledge.
I live in Florida and our state universities are already very cheap to begin with (under $20k for everything — room, board, tuition) but we also have a program called Bright Futures which allows students with certain credentials to go to state Us virtually free of cost. Georgia also has a program where high achieving students can go for an extremely low price. Amazing!!!! How about those good Democratic states of California or New Jersey? 😅
Yeah, and you can get a free tuition in Alabama with 30 ACT and 3.5 GPA. But who wants to go there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember that when you VOTE!
?? Who is going to lower the costs? Serious question.
Republican governors aren’t.
How about some Dems then? Name a couple who've made this a campaign pledge.
I live in Florida and our state universities are already very cheap to begin with (under $20k for everything — room, board, tuition) but we also have a program called Bright Futures which allows students with certain credentials to go to state Us virtually free of cost. Georgia also has a program where high achieving students can go for an extremely low price. Amazing!!!! How about those good Democratic states of California or New Jersey? 😅
Yeah, and you can get a free tuition in Alabama with 30 ACT and 3.5 GPA. But who wants to go there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember that when you VOTE!
?? Who is going to lower the costs? Serious question.
Republican governors aren’t.
How about some Dems then? Name a couple who've made this a campaign pledge.
I live in Florida and our state universities are already very cheap to begin with (under $20k for everything — room, board, tuition) but we also have a program called Bright Futures which allows students with certain credentials to go to state Us virtually free of cost. Georgia also has a program where high achieving students can go for an extremely low price. Amazing!!!! How about those good Democratic states of California or New Jersey? 😅
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would save for the amount of in-State tuition. Nowadays, a lot of schools give merit aid to upper middle class families. For instance, only 6% of students at Connecticut College are full pay, and that’s a NESCAC school that is in decent financial shape. You may be priced out of elite schools, but there will still be good schools left. My parents have an education trust for our kids and we plan on encouraging them to not use it all on undergrad, but go to a cheaper option, and then have grad school potentially paid off too.
Source?
Yeah there’s no way that’s true. Or their spreading the FA dollars way too thin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would save for the amount of in-State tuition. Nowadays, a lot of schools give merit aid to upper middle class families. For instance, only 6% of students at Connecticut College are full pay, and that’s a NESCAC school that is in decent financial shape. You may be priced out of elite schools, but there will still be good schools left. My parents have an education trust for our kids and we plan on encouraging them to not use it all on undergrad, but go to a cheaper option, and then have grad school potentially paid off too.
Source?
Anonymous wrote:I would save for the amount of in-State tuition. Nowadays, a lot of schools give merit aid to upper middle class families. For instance, only 6% of students at Connecticut College are full pay, and that’s a NESCAC school that is in decent financial shape. You may be priced out of elite schools, but there will still be good schools left. My parents have an education trust for our kids and we plan on encouraging them to not use it all on undergrad, but go to a cheaper option, and then have grad school potentially paid off too.