Quote:
Originally Posted by jfrog
Here's the thing coadie. When I graduated high school I was 4th in a class of 60. I had the highest SAT scores in my class. I ended up with enough scholarships/pell grant/non-merit based scholarships to mostly pay for my first year at virginia tech. However, most of my scholarships were only 1 semester/1 year ones. So had I stayed, I might have accumulated alot of debt. (Virginia Tech is a fairly cheap college in comparison. The whole year costed about 15,000-16,000 back in 2005. My roommate was from Pennyslvania. Out of state tuition for him at Virginia Tech was actually cheaper than instate tuition at Penn State.
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Graduated high school
graduated from high school
I know a lot of education inhibited people that remind me they "graduated high school" not from high school.
Yep. After my second graduate degree, my college debt was 300 dollars.
Fortunately I started my career with no financial burden.
My parents helped out by sending food at Christmas.
One of the issues is resourcefullness. Students need to learn how to get it paid for in addition to learning endurance education takes.