College has way outpaced inflation, and most parents remember it being not so bad, back in the day.
I paid for my college, my dh paid for his and our children will pay for their own. I don't see anything wrong with them paying for their own futures. They need to be smart about it and not go to a school they can't afford to pay for and they need to think about their future earning potential and not take out $90,000 in loans to be unemployable.
DH thinks the kids should pay for it himself because he did. But he went to 3/4 of a year at trade school in 1989/90, so it was a bit different for him.
Part of what you mentioned is actually why I was so curious about this topic.
I do not have children and don't know if I ever will. I am at the age where I graduated 2 years ago and am trying to figure out how to afford paying my loans, getting married, moving out of my parents house, and still have at least a little bit of a life!
When I was looking at schools, I was convinced I wanted to go out of state and looked at a bunch of school with my dad. I got in everywhere I applied to, but ultimately got close to no money from any schools even though I had great greats, a great ACT score, and had many extra-curricular activities. Because of that, tuition at those school would have been at least double what I paid to go to the only in-state school I applied to. I worked part time through college while taking 18+ credit hours a semester. I ended up graduating with around 60k in debt and was lucky to find a great full time job a few months after graduation. I have always been very good with my money, so I have paid much more than the minimum towards my loans per month, bought a used car that I paid off in 10 months, and saved as much as I could. My fiancé doesn't have school debt, but it has still been very hard for us to financially justify moving our or getting him the car he needs! We finally were able to make it work and he has ordered his car and we move into our first apartment at the end of this month.
I think the main reason I was so curious about how different parents handle this situation is because I see people I know my age or younger going out and buying houses or expensive cars and it baffles me how they make it work, and then I realize a lot of kids probably don't come out of school with as much debt.
I feel like so many who say, "I paid for my own so they can pay for theirs" are not considering the steep increase in costs over the years. The costs have absolutely far outpaced the earning potential of most 18 year olds.
https://trends.collegeboard.org/col...oard-over-time-1976-77_2016-17-selected-years
https://www.attn.com/stories/197/how-much-you-need-work-cover-tuition-1978-vs-2014
There are possible paths certainly, like living at home and going to CC, but so often on the college threads people don't seem to realize that options are related so closely to parental contributions. If parents can't/won't/haven't planned to contribute then a students options are limited and they need to be fully aware.
I 100% agree. I see it often on the budget board, especially. My BA cost me less than $25,000. Today, that is about what one year costs at a state university.I feel like so many who say, "I paid for my own so they can pay for theirs" are not considering the steep increase in costs over the years. The costs have absolutely far outpaced the earning potential of most 18 year olds.
https://trends.collegeboard.org/col...oard-over-time-1976-77_2016-17-selected-years
https://www.attn.com/stories/197/how-much-you-need-work-cover-tuition-1978-vs-2014
There are possible paths certainly, like living at home and going to CC, but so often on the college threads people don't seem to realize that options are related so closely to parental contributions. If parents can't/won't/haven't planned to contribute then a students options are limited and they need to be fully aware.
I always laugh when people say this, as they obviously don't live in a rural area. Our son does live off campus, with roommates. But if someone prefers to live on campus, their costs will be close to $25,000 a year.I paid for every dime of my degree. During the same time period, my parents paid for everything in the 6 years it took my brother to burn through all of his academic probations. Jerks.
My husband and I paid for my oldest daughter's undergraduate degrees (both obtained in one 4 year period). We also paid for her medical school. And for the almost $30K in expenses that you have to spend outside of med school during the last few months of it. Yikes!
We are almost finished paying for everything for our youngest daughter. She has 2 semesters left on a chemical engineering degree. If she wants to go to graduate school - we will pay for that. If she passes on graduate school - we will give her the down payment on a house as a thanks for not wanting to go to medical school.
School today does not need to cost $25K per year. Live at home, do community college and online classes when available, live off campus with roommates, etc. It can cost a lot less. I have a friend's daughter who just graduated with a 4 year degree from a solid state school. Her total was just shy of $30K.
I always laugh when people say this, as they obviously don't live in a rural area. Our son does live off campus, with roommates. But if someone prefers to live on campus, their costs will be close to $25,000 a year.
I honestly feel and maybe I am wrong but I don't think that real life is like the people on these boards. I believe that the folks on these boards make more than the average person - putting our children through college would cost us per child at least 25k per year - so 75k for all 3 for 1 year at an instate school like U of M or Michigan State. How in the heck do you people pay for all of that for your children? Scholarships are just not that easy to get here in our area and because we make a decent wage we are expected to pay 95% of our kids schooling - so how do you pay for bach degrees and grad school and some of you med school? What am I doing wrong here?
I honestly feel and maybe I am wrong but I don't think that real life is like the people on these boards. I believe that the folks on these boards make more than the average person - putting our children through college would cost us per child at least 25k per year - so 75k for all 3 for 1 year at an instate school like U of M or Michigan State. How in the heck do you people pay for all of that for your children? Scholarships are just not that easy to get here in our area and because we make a decent wage we are expected to pay 95% of our kids schooling - so how do you pay for bach degrees and grad school and some of you med school? What am I doing wrong here?
One way or the other, most kids need their parent's help. It might be money, providing room and board for them to go locally, or it might be cosigning loans. I don't know any other way students can get beyond the federally subsidized student loans. Do people really give college kids loans without a cosigner?
Maybe someone here can educate me. When I hear about students with 80K of undergrad student debt I wonder HOW they got those loans without a cosigner. I saw state loans mentioned on this thread. In our state, it's the federal student loans (31K for undergrad) and the rest of the loans offered are parent loans. The only other option is private loans, which students would be hard pressed to get without a cosigner.
I've known so many people IRL who say they aren't going to help their kids with college and then are shocked that their kids can't get loans for the whole thing.
Also - AP classes. My youngest started with over 60 hours of credit.
Yes - some CCs are junk. So are some high schools. I went to one that was. But - I dug my way out of that. If you want to, you can. If you want to complain about it - fine. I complained - but I also worked on making things better for myself at the same time.
I live in a small, rural town and my kids' have friends, smart and capable friends who have parents that will not help at all with College costs. Some even go so far as refusing to fill out the FAFSA or provide information needed to the student so the student can apply for aid. They say the kids can pay for themselves to go to school. So those kids just don't go to College, not even Community College because they can't afford it. They work retail or fast food places and will end up stuck in that life for years to come.
The key is planning. It's all about saving for years, making sacrifices, etc. in order to do so. I certainly couldn't pull 75K out of nowhere. I had done some prepaid tuition, gave up vacations, increased my employment, the student's employment, etc. all made it possible.