That is my point exactly. I am not a believer in the "going away" experience necessarily (even though my DD is about to do just that) because a lot of times it just turns into a 4 year drink-fest. That is not my idea of education. However, a reasonably priced education is there for anyone who wants one.
Do you really think that going away to college is a 4 year drink fest? Yes, there are SOME kids that do that but the vast majority of kids don't.
I fully believe in the going away aspect of college. It is a way for kids to FINALLY have to make decisions on their own but still have a safety net of the school and parents to fall back on, ESPECIALLY with the dramatic rise in helicopter parenting!
Obviously you go to college for the academics but there is a LOT more to be learned living on campus then what you get in books that is a very valuable part of growing up that you can NOT get living at home, period.
ITA. My last company wouldn't even look at you if you didn't have a college degree and frankly, there was no reason why a HS graduate couldn't do many of the jobs we had.
I went away to school-primiarly because I was an only child and felt I really needed to get away from Mom and Dad for a while. It was good for me, I met some wonderful people and had great experiences-but I do not see why everyone should be expected to do it.
It is probably true that a high school student could do your job but part of what employers look for with college graduates is their responsibility level. Someone that went to college, did well and GRADUATES shows that they can start something and finish something. Since high school is compulsory, you don't have that same benchmark with a high school graduate.
I've accepted that all schools are party schools if you wish them to be.
Very true.
Unless they are going to cut my tuition, there is no way an IVY is going to work with you or for you. I know Harvard tuition is free for those who have a low income but for the rest of the students, unless you are rich, you will be in hock until you die. The best thing you can do is pick a lucrative career to pay off that loan. I would NEVER send my child to an IVY (if they were accepted). If she was good enough to get into an IVY, I'd send her to a good state school on a FREE ride.
You do realize that your child is MORE likely to get a free ride from a private school then a state school, right??? You do realize that private school endowments are significantly larger then state schools so there is more money to give, right? Also, for the federal financial aid, if the school you are attending costs more, you qualify for more aid. The award is based on how much your family can contribute so if you can contribute $10,000 and the school costs $10,000, no aid, if the school costs $40,000, you qualify for $30,000 in aid.
Is a
4 YEAR college right for everyone, NO. Is some kind of post-secondary education right for everyone, YES. We have to really define what "going to college" means. There are plenty of kids that are not right for a 4 year college and are better suited for a community college, vo-tech or the military. The point isn't so much WHERE you go but THAT you go.
As for colleges costing "so much more" these days, proportionally they don't cost any more then they did when I graduated. When I was in college, a year's tuition was slightly less then was the average first year salary with someone with a BA/BS could expect right out of college--for a PRIVATE college-state schools were about half of that. Today, a year's tuition is slightly less then what someone graduating with a BA/BS can expect to make right out of college with state schools being about half of that. Yes, the number is bigger, but so are the salaries.