Anonymous wrote:Curious to see if college coaches will be watching High school matches when the recruiting window opens, the ECNL will be finished outside of showcase and nationals. It would be a big boost to high school soccer if colleges attended games.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious to see if college coaches will be watching High school matches when the recruiting window opens, the ECNL will be finished outside of showcase and nationals. It would be a big boost to high school soccer if colleges attended games.
Absolutely not
Anonymous wrote:Curious to see if college coaches will be watching High school matches when the recruiting window opens, the ECNL will be finished outside of showcase and nationals. It would be a big boost to high school soccer if colleges attended games.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:150,000 for a Catholic HS degree followed by 150,000 for a college degree. For one kid. Seems like an awesome investment.
Good job - Thumbs up
When people in this area see the differences in live versus remote learners on the other side of the pandemic, at least one of those years of catholic high school will look like a fantastic investment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:150,000 for a Catholic HS degree followed by 150,000 for a college degree. For one kid. Seems like an awesome investment.
Good job - Thumbs up
When people in this area see the differences in live versus remote learners on the other side of the pandemic, at least one of those years of catholic high school will look like a fantastic investment.
Anonymous wrote:150,000 for a Catholic HS degree followed by 150,000 for a college degree. For one kid. Seems like an awesome investment.
Good job - Thumbs up
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
JMU
VT
Radford
Mason
Penn State
etc
One of these schools doesn't belong in this grouping!
Anonymous wrote:
JMU
VT
Radford
Mason
Penn State
etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. I’m getting whiplash going between this thread and those on the College and University forum. If you did a poll over there, I’d expect 99% of the posters would pick an Ivy or a 25% athletic scholarship at Notre Dame over a full ride at CMU, Mason, etc. if there was any possible way to swing the pricier and more highly rated school.
Of course, a lot of those posters also seem to believe that all athletes are stupid and that the admissions advantages athletic recruitment confers are an unsupportable outrage.
Perhaps people would pick an Ivy, but I think most would pick a full ride in a good college over graduating from ND with a mountain of student debt.
This is a soccer forum. Where does the level and quality of soccer factor in? It’s a big deal for my DD who also happens to get excellent grades and would be academically competitive at all of the above. If you’re looking at level and quality of SOCCER, then ND.
A Virginia kid going to an out of state school will pay almost 4x that of a in-state student. So a 25 percent scholarship for academics and a 25 percent scholarship for athletics will not nearly go as far. Yes, ND is awesome. I would love for my kid to go there. However, a full ride to a lesser in-state program, both academically and athletically, where my kid can play and graduate debt free is the winner. Why? Because I agree with the poster who said that the degree is more important than the school.
Not me. If my kid is good enough to get an admissions advantage and play for a highly ranked school, then we’ll be happy to pay for that even if they could get a full ride elsewhere. I know this is not an option for folks who need aid in order to afford school.
I am surprised by the people here saying connections and school reputation don’t matter. That has not been my experience at all at least for kids’ first job or two post graduation. Of course the level of soccer matters as well, along with team and coach dynamics and the likelihood of playing time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. I’m getting whiplash going between this thread and those on the College and University forum. If you did a poll over there, I’d expect 99% of the posters would pick an Ivy or a 25% athletic scholarship at Notre Dame over a full ride at CMU, Mason, etc. if there was any possible way to swing the pricier and more highly rated school.
Of course, a lot of those posters also seem to believe that all athletes are stupid and that the admissions advantages athletic recruitment confers are an unsupportable outrage.
Perhaps people would pick an Ivy, but I think most would pick a full ride in a good college over graduating from ND with a mountain of student debt.
This is a soccer forum. Where does the level and quality of soccer factor in? It’s a big deal for my DD who also happens to get excellent grades and would be academically competitive at all of the above. If you’re looking at level and quality of SOCCER, then ND.
A Virginia kid going to an out of state school will pay almost 4x that of a in-state student. So a 25 percent scholarship for academics and a 25 percent scholarship for athletics will not nearly go as far. Yes, ND is awesome. I would love for my kid to go there. However, a full ride to a lesser in-state program, both academically and athletically, where my kid can play and graduate debt free is the winner. Why? Because I agree with the poster who said that the degree is more important than the school.