Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I for the life of me do not understand how this country let college cost be determined by parent income. Middle class and UMC are in no more financial position to pay for college than those making 50-60k a year, unless those MC and UMC forewent houses, cars, etc. - which would undermine a large portion of the economy. The fact that the equity in my home is considered accessible to pay for college is ludicrous. The whole system is broken, very broken.
This is ludicrous, as it relates to UMC families. We are UMC, and have saved more than $300k in various 529s for our rising senior's college tuition and other college expenses. That's sufficient, when including available cashflow, for one kid to attend a private college, or two to attend state schools. And that was not, by any means, the limit to what we could have saved; we stopped dedicated college savings a few years ago and redirected to a taxable account, to provide more flexibility.
It requires planning, and dedication to savings, but UMC families can (and should, in my view) absolutely pay for their children's college. Or are you one of those people who whines that you shoudl get financial aid on your $350k income because you have overspent for decades?
Also, please tell us why why home equity shouldn't be included in financial aid calculations, and if it isn't, how abuses can be curtailed.
You are the exception. You still are not in a position to pay full freight at Gettysburg College or Washington and Lee without an impact on you. But in the latter, a kid’s whose parents make $80k or below goes for free.
The system also does not account for the fact that people make more money as their kids grow up, so capturing the income made the year prior to college is just a snapshot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I for the life of me do not understand how this country let college cost be determined by parent income. Middle class and UMC are in no more financial position to pay for college than those making 50-60k a year, unless those MC and UMC forewent houses, cars, etc. - which would undermine a large portion of the economy. The fact that the equity in my home is considered accessible to pay for college is ludicrous. The whole system is broken, very broken.
This is ludicrous, as it relates to UMC families. We are UMC, and have saved more than $300k in various 529s for our rising senior's college tuition and other college expenses. That's sufficient, when including available cashflow, for one kid to attend a private college, or two to attend state schools. And that was not, by any means, the limit to what we could have saved; we stopped dedicated college savings a few years ago and redirected to a taxable account, to provide more flexibility.
It requires planning, and dedication to savings, but UMC families can (and should, in my view) absolutely pay for their children's college. Or are you one of those people who whines that you shoudl get financial aid on your $350k income because you have overspent for decades?
Also, please tell us why why home equity shouldn't be included in financial aid calculations, and if it isn't, how abuses can be curtailed.
You are the exception. You still are not in a position to pay full freight at Gettysburg College or Washington and Lee without an impact on you. But in the latter, a kid’s whose parents make $80k or below goes for free.
The system also does not account for the fact that people make more money as their kids grow up, so capturing the income made the year prior to college is just a snapshot.
Nobody pays full freight for Gettysburg. Literally everyone gets some merit aid.
Then why not just reduce the cost?
Anonymous wrote:DH and I first had to pay back student loans, then save for a down payment on a house. Meanwhile we had kids and no family able to help out with infant/toddler care. So it cost us a boatload of money for full time daycare. Any extra money went toward saving for a house and toward our retirement. Then aftercare costs.
Then we finally were able to buy a house and between finishing paying back loans, paying the mortgage, funding our retirement, taking vacations to National Parks where we camped, theye wasn’t anything left to put toward college.
This is the situation for most of our friends who are the first generation to go to college. Our kids are going to state universities.
What is really tough is we counted that when both our kids were in college (2 year overlap) we would get financial aid because since our kids were born FAFSA has always factored in having multiple family members in college. That disappeared this year! So we aren’t sure how we are swinging paying for both kids when fafsa doesn’t factor that in and now student loans are being cut.
Anonymous wrote:Start saving in 529 plan at birth. Use a low fee one with good options like Utah. Do as much as you can afford and don't stop. The balance will accumulate to a big number over time. 13 year old has $350k and I'm no longer contributing. Slow and steady does the trick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell are people going to afford med school?
Most med school students have doctor parents, it's sort of a family trade. It is very hard to become an MD from a LMC family. The truly exceptional ones get full ride at Cleveland or NYU, but still need around 40k-60k for postdoc or highly competitive residency matching. I guess they don't think we need a lot of MDs now, if people will die from Medicare and Medicaid cuts.
Most families with med parents, the kids don’t follow. That’s what I have seen. It’s the middle class (and lower class) kids who pursuer it nowaydays. The kids with the med mom/dad are pursuing passion careers. These days, Med work is tougher option - hard to get there and stick with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell are people going to afford med school?
Most med school students have doctor parents, it's sort of a family trade. It is very hard to become an MD from a LMC family. The truly exceptional ones get full ride at Cleveland or NYU, but still need around 40k-60k for postdoc or highly competitive residency matching. I guess they don't think we need a lot of MDs now, if people will die from Medicare and Medicaid cuts.
My niece has doctors as parents and her medical school loans total $500k.
That makes no sense.
Of course it makes sense. Medical school is extremely expensive. And not all parents pay for graduate and professional school.
It’s selfish if you have the income.
And it's not selfish if you do not have the income. You assume that all physicians are very wealthy, and that is a myth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We save for it from the moment our children are born. And frankly, we don't have more children than we think we can pay for. (I'm not trying to be inflammatory or say that you had too many kids. I'm saying I would have had more kids if I had more money.)
This is WILD! I would say the majority of people I grew up with paid for college themselves - yes took out loans, some quite substantial. Exactly zero of them wish they hadn’t been born instead of going into some debt!
Times have changed.
+1
Let's not forget community college and financial aid. Roughly half of my friends did four years in the military and then earned a bachelor's or masters. Sure, they were a couple years behind, but the military was a good thing for most of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I for the life of me do not understand how this country let college cost be determined by parent income. Middle class and UMC are in no more financial position to pay for college than those making 50-60k a year, unless those MC and UMC forewent houses, cars, etc. - which would undermine a large portion of the economy. The fact that the equity in my home is considered accessible to pay for college is ludicrous. The whole system is broken, very broken.
This is ludicrous, as it relates to UMC families. We are UMC, and have saved more than $300k in various 529s for our rising senior's college tuition and other college expenses. That's sufficient, when including available cashflow, for one kid to attend a private college, or two to attend state schools. And that was not, by any means, the limit to what we could have saved; we stopped dedicated college savings a few years ago and redirected to a taxable account, to provide more flexibility.
It requires planning, and dedication to savings, but UMC families can (and should, in my view) absolutely pay for their children's college. Or are you one of those people who whines that you shoudl get financial aid on your $350k income because you have overspent for decades?
Also, please tell us why why home equity shouldn't be included in financial aid calculations, and if it isn't, how abuses can be curtailed.
You are the exception. You still are not in a position to pay full freight at Gettysburg College or Washington and Lee without an impact on you. But in the latter, a kid’s whose parents make $80k or below goes for free.
The system also does not account for the fact that people make more money as their kids grow up, so capturing the income made the year prior to college is just a snapshot.
Nobody pays full freight for Gettysburg. Literally everyone gets some merit aid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We save for it from the moment our children are born. And frankly, we don't have more children than we think we can pay for. (I'm not trying to be inflammatory or say that you had too many kids. I'm saying I would have had more kids if I had more money.)
This is WILD! I would say the majority of people I grew up with paid for college themselves - yes took out loans, some quite substantial. Exactly zero of them wish they hadn’t been born instead of going into some debt!
Times have changed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell are people going to afford med school?
Most med school students have doctor parents, it's sort of a family trade. It is very hard to become an MD from a LMC family. The truly exceptional ones get full ride at Cleveland or NYU, but still need around 40k-60k for postdoc or highly competitive residency matching. I guess they don't think we need a lot of MDs now, if people will die from Medicare and Medicaid cuts.
My niece has doctors as parents and her medical school loans total $500k.
That makes no sense.
Of course it makes sense. Medical school is extremely expensive. And not all parents pay for graduate and professional school.
It’s selfish if you have the income.
And it's not selfish if you do not have the income. You assume that all physicians are very wealthy, and that is a myth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell are people going to afford med school?
Most med school students have doctor parents, it's sort of a family trade. It is very hard to become an MD from a LMC family. The truly exceptional ones get full ride at Cleveland or NYU, but still need around 40k-60k for postdoc or highly competitive residency matching. I guess they don't think we need a lot of MDs now, if people will die from Medicare and Medicaid cuts.
My niece has doctors as parents and her medical school loans total $500k.
That makes no sense.
Of course it makes sense. Medical school is extremely expensive. And not all parents pay for graduate and professional school.
It’s selfish if you have the income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We save for it from the moment our children are born. And frankly, we don't have more children than we think we can pay for. (I'm not trying to be inflammatory or say that you had too many kids. I'm saying I would have had more kids if I had more money.)
This is WILD! I would say the majority of people I grew up with paid for college themselves - yes took out loans, some quite substantial. Exactly zero of them wish they hadn’t been born instead of going into some debt!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell are people going to afford med school?
Most med school students have doctor parents, it's sort of a family trade. It is very hard to become an MD from a LMC family. The truly exceptional ones get full ride at Cleveland or NYU, but still need around 40k-60k for postdoc or highly competitive residency matching. I guess they don't think we need a lot of MDs now, if people will die from Medicare and Medicaid cuts.
My niece has doctors as parents and her medical school loans total $500k.
That makes no sense.
Of course it makes sense. Medical school is extremely expensive. And not all parents pay for graduate and professional school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell are people going to afford med school?
Most med school students have doctor parents, it's sort of a family trade. It is very hard to become an MD from a LMC family. The truly exceptional ones get full ride at Cleveland or NYU, but still need around 40k-60k for postdoc or highly competitive residency matching. I guess they don't think we need a lot of MDs now, if people will die from Medicare and Medicaid cuts.
My niece has doctors as parents and her medical school loans total $500k.
That is a family choice. I know plenty of doctors and others in tech who fully pay for med/law school for their kids. They start by overfunding the 529 with intent that there will be grad school/professsional school at some point