Agreed.
And don't lose sight of the fact that less than half the adult population in America has a Bachelor's degree anyway. At our high school something like 80-85% of all our students START college, but no one keeps stats on how many finish.
Half of First-Time Undergrads Finish in 6 Years, Study Finds
By Caralee Adams on December 1, 2010 12:26 PM |
New numbers are out today on college completion from the U.S. Department of Education. About 49 percent of students who began to pursue a certificate or bachelor's degree in 2003-2004 had completed their work six years later.
The First Look report by the Institute of Education Services tracks the rates at which first-time undergraduates complete degrees, transfer, or drop out.
Highlights of the research:
Breaking down the numbers among the 2003-04 beginning students: About 9 percent had received a certificate; 9 percent had earned an associate's degree; and 31 percent had completed a bachelor's degree from any institution by June 2009.
About 15 percent who began their studies in 2003-04 remained enrolled but had not yet completed a program of study.
Of the group tracked, 36 percent had left their schools without a credential of any kind within the six years of the study.
43 pounds!Well today I'm going to offer a different perspective on the process; this one has to do with the "weight" of college. Since September 2009 I've saved and tracked every piece of physical mail that "Junior" has received from colleges. Over the last year and a half I've had to move to bigger boxes and expand his seemingly never ending list of potential colleges.
I've learned about "couples" like Washington & Lee, Franklin & Marshall, William & Mary as well as Baldwin & Wallace. We've heard from more Technical Institutes than you can shake a slide rule at including NY Poly, Rochester, Pratt, Lawrence, Rennselaer, Stevens, Michigan and Illinois. I've met quite a few of the Wesleyans - Indiana, Illinois, Ohio and the plain old Wessy in Connecticut. Plus I got tired of counting the Saints after Louis, Johns and Olaf.
To date he's received 471 pieces of mail from 131 colleges with a total weight of 43.5 pounds. The funny thing is that the mail sent seemed to have no impact on his final list. His 6 applied to schools sent him a total of 19 pieces of (pre-application) mail with his safety school accounting for (12) of those items. Two of his schools sent him (0) pieces and a third sent only (1).
FWIW, here are the "Top 5" mailers:
1. Washington Univ. St. Louis - 27 pcs.
2. Vanderbilt - 20 pcs.
3. Chicago - 17 pcs.
4. Carleton College - 15 pcs.
4. NYU - 15 pcs.
4. Univ. of Miami - 15 pcs.
109 mailings <---> 0 applications. Not one of these schools even vaguely tickled his interest; so I'm at a loss to understand the algorithms that go into deciding who gets mail and who doesn't.
Found this post on College Confidential and thought it was interesting so I am posting it here:
43 pounds!
You can find the thread here if you are interested in reading the whole thing.
We're done, too! DD was accepted to Boston College and Elon. She was so, so excited about Boston College but we warned her not to get her hopes up. We knew that we could not afford BC without SUBSTANTIAL! aid (despite what we've been able to save) and we didn't want her to be disappointed. All we kept saying was "We have to wait for the financial aid package before a final decision can be made." You can imagine there were several difficult conversations with her about what we could and couldn't do. We were trying not to feel guilty but we knew how hard she had worked to get into such a selective school. And, of course, we knew how badly she wanted to go there.
Well, the aid package arrived yesterday. They have met 100% of her need and more than 75% of it is scholarship money - not loans!!!OMG !!! She just signed up for "Admitted Eagle" day and we are so proud for her!
I hope there are positive outcomes for all of the rest of our DISer kids and that the stress of college selection is behind them all soon!
Now, THAT is a parent with WAY too much time on her hands.
Notice it wasn't the son who counted and cataloged all that junk mail?
Now, THAT is a parent with WAY too much time on her hands.
Notice it wasn't the son who counted and cataloged all that junk mail?
Meh, I found it interesting and amusing.![]()
I also think it's interesting and, although we haven't counted it, my son is keeping all of his. We're planning a "decision day bon fire." Hopefully his friends have been saving too.
My 10th grader is already keeping his AND counting emails. I thought this was pretty normal?
We're done, too! DD was accepted to Boston College and Elon. She was so, so excited about Boston College but we warned her not to get her hopes up. We knew that we could not afford BC without SUBSTANTIAL! aid (despite what we've been able to save) and we didn't want her to be disappointed. All we kept saying was "We have to wait for the financial aid package before a final decision can be made." You can imagine there were several difficult conversations with her about what we could and couldn't do. We were trying not to feel guilty but we knew how hard she had worked to get into such a selective school. And, of course, we knew how badly she wanted to go there.
Well, the aid package arrived yesterday. They have met 100% of her need and more than 75% of it is scholarship money - not loans!!!OMG !!! She just signed up for "Admitted Eagle" day and we are so proud for her!
I hope there are positive outcomes for all of the rest of our DISer kids and that the stress of college selection is behind them all soon!
Now, THAT is a parent with WAY too much time on her hands.
We're done, too! DD was accepted to Boston College and Elon. She was so, so excited about Boston College but we warned her not to get her hopes up. We knew that we could not afford BC without SUBSTANTIAL! aid (despite what we've been able to save) and we didn't want her to be disappointed. All we kept saying was "We have to wait for the financial aid package before a final decision can be made." You can imagine there were several difficult conversations with her about what we could and couldn't do. We were trying not to feel guilty but we knew how hard she had worked to get into such a selective school. And, of course, we knew how badly she wanted to go there.
Well, the aid package arrived yesterday. They have met 100% of her need and more than 75% of it is scholarship money - not loans!!!OMG !!! She just signed up for "Admitted Eagle" day and we are so proud for her!
I hope there are positive outcomes for all of the rest of our DISer kids and that the stress of college selection is behind them all soon!
Found this post on College Confidential and thought it was interesting so I am posting it here:
43 pounds!
You can find the thread here if you are interested in reading the whole thing.
Meh, I found it interesting and amusing.![]()
I need to ask, I know that as parents you don't want your kids to come out owing a lot of money with loans but it seems like no one is giving their kids the option at all. A lot of people are saying that their kids are getting into their dream colleges but can't go because of not enough scholarship. Did you consider taking loans out at allWas it your decision or your kids to not take out loans and not go where they want
![]()
I need to ask, I know that as parents you don't want your kids to come out owing a lot of money with loans but it seems like no one is giving their kids the option at all. A lot of people are saying that their kids are getting into their dream colleges but can't go because of not enough scholarship. Did you consider taking loans out at allWas it your decision or your kids to not take out loans and not go where they want
![]()