Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP apply to the school's you like and apply for aid. There are one too many FA haters on this board who have nothing better to do but tell you what's not possible. #250KHHItwokidsandreceiving50%FA
I agree with this poster. OP, apply for aid and you will be pleasantly surprised. Our HHI is 250 as well with both spouses working and we receive $15k in aid for 2 kids. Annual tuition is 56k for 2 kids. We could make it work without the aid, but the aid allows us some breathing room. I truly believe everyone with hhi of 350k or less should apply for aid. The schools recognize that these tuitions are ridiculous even for those who make a ton of money.
Such entitlement. You do know you are taking it away from the truly needy, right?
What truly needy? Lol. I seriously doubt your statement is correct. Show me the truly needy family that applied and didn't get any? Chances are the truly needy they admitted is getting 97% FA and this poster is probably getting a much smaller percentage, but a percentage that helps. I think you are bit delusional about who is exactly applying to private school. LOL
+1
If the truly needy aren't applying, the schools should be out recruiting. Otherwise, what exactly IS their mission? We "provide good educational options to people who would have gotten a pretty good education anyway"
There are several post of people saying that they needed too much aid and the school awarded zero even though DC got in. In most cases FA is a gap pay, maybe in high school you have a super star with a full ride but that's not how the funds are allocated from what I have seen.
Anonymous wrote:OP again.
I know it won't change your mind, but fwiw, I think you should know that I chose to be a SAHM because I felt it was the very best thing for my kids and made sacrifices to make it possible (including giving up a career I very much valued). I don't feel I'm wasting my time at home with them, and what drove me to stay at home with them is exactly the same interest in why I'd like to consider private school -- I want what's absolutely best for them. I strongly believe that me working and most of my paycheck into childcare would not be serving them nearly as well as being home with them.
Do I plan to stay at home once they are in school full-time? No, I don't, and then I will have an income that could be put toward their education. But there will be a few years when my youngest is at home with me and the other is in school already. And even if I put my entire income toward their schooling, I probably could not afford the price of two kids in an expensive private school (I know some may be more affordable than others, though).
You are delusional if you think that my DH and I can magically get higher paying jobs. Don't you think a lot of people would get those jobs if they could? It's not like government work is necessarily my DH's "dream come true." If he could get a higher-paying job, he would have it. What government does provide, however, is stability and guaranteed income (i.e. not consulting or contract work).
And you don't know me enough to say I'm not working my butt off. I have a baby at home right now and thus am not working, but prior to this, while SAH, I was working a PT teaching position in the evenings and doing freelance work on weekends and evenings. My capacity to earn a higher salary, however, is just not there. I have a master's degree and great experience, but my field is not one that pays high salaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP apply to the school's you like and apply for aid. There are one too many FA haters on this board who have nothing better to do but tell you what's not possible. #250KHHItwokidsandreceiving50%FA
I agree with this poster. OP, apply for aid and you will be pleasantly surprised. Our HHI is 250 as well with both spouses working and we receive $15k in aid for 2 kids. Annual tuition is 56k for 2 kids. We could make it work without the aid, but the aid allows us some breathing room. I truly believe everyone with hhi of 350k or less should apply for aid. The schools recognize that these tuitions are ridiculous even for those who make a ton of money.
Such entitlement. You do know you are taking it away from the truly needy, right?
What truly needy? Lol. I seriously doubt your statement is correct. Show me the truly needy family that applied and didn't get any? Chances are the truly needy they admitted is getting 97% FA and this poster is probably getting a much smaller percentage, but a percentage that helps. I think you are bit delusional about who is exactly applying to private school. LOL
+1
If the truly needy aren't applying, the schools should be out recruiting. Otherwise, what exactly IS their mission? We "provide good educational options to people who would have gotten a pretty good education anyway"
Anonymous wrote:I don't get how it is different from FA in college (meaning outright grants, not loans). Very few colleges are absolutely free but there are many that are low cost. Full resident freight at City College of New York and UDC for example is less than $7500 a year.
It's the same principle--those paying full freight are subsidizing those who are not, at least to some extent. Of course many colleges have larger endowments than private schools and some aid comes from that, but still some students are subsidizing others. It's just a question of degree. That more people pay the full sticker price at private schools than at colleges is irrelevant to the principle.
I am wondering why people are protesting this point. Is it because they are paying full freight for private but are hoping their DCs get financial aid for college and somehow this is different so they can freely attack OP?
Where is the outrage that a child of a SAHM gets financial aid for college but the child of two full-time working parents who also scrimped and saved does not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmmm...all these arguments against OP are also arguments against any financial aid at all whether for private school or college.
College financial aid is not the same as private school K-12 aid. Full stop. Not the same sources, no option for student loans, a K-12 child can't work nights and weekends to pay for room/board, etc.
Also, the college pricing model is actually based on charging differential rates according to what people can afford. Few people pay the sticker price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmmm...all these arguments against OP are also arguments against any financial aid at all whether for private school or college.
College financial aid is not the same as private school K-12 aid. Full stop. Not the same sources, no option for student loans, a K-12 child can't work nights and weekends to pay for room/board, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Hmmm...all these arguments against OP are also arguments against any financial aid at all whether for private school or college.