Money Matters
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Any good books or advice on saving for college?
Re: Any good books or advice on saving for college?
I really think college is what you make of it, though. TBH, I went to a well regarded private school but other than keeping my grades up, didn't take the best advantage of my opportunities there. That's on me. Many other kids take great advantage of what's available to them at public schools and end up much better off for it.
Those schools really aren't about the experience at all. It's about the contacts and opportunities.
When LSU played Vandy at home my freshman year (football), all of these people showed up and started tailgating on our campus beginning on Wednesday for a Saturday game. The Vandy freshmen were really perplexed by this, because what about classes? And tests? I remember being heckled by an LSU fan on my way to take a calculus exam.
Now my colleague who went to Alabama, did not rush, worried about football only on Saturdays, and then killed it in school while he was there is doing great. He says he was the exception though.
As far as donating to universities I will not donate to my "general" undergrad university for reasons already mentioned. However, the department for my major is great. I have a lot of respect for the faculty, what they did for me as a student and the opportunities I had with that major after graduation. My donations go directly to the department and are usually used for student scholarships for that major.
I firmly believe that a lot of private school influence is regional. If I'm looking at a stack of resumes, I'm not going to be impressed by a private school I've never heard of or only have seen in the NCAA basketball tournament.
The difference between an academically rigorous public school and academically rigorous private school is that more kids drop out of the public school. This isn't because public school is "worse" or attracting "lesser" students, it's because there are more distractions. It's harder to cut it at the public school.
I do not think my education at Vandy was any better than UGA. I do think my likelihood to succeed was higher at Vandy than UGA. My parents agreed, and that's why they were willing to pay for it. For the record - my dad is a college professor at a state school.
Re: tail-gating on Wednesdays - just an example. I'm not making a generalization that every state school with a football team starts tailgating on Wednesdays. LSU does though, in case that school is on your radar...
@julieanne912 and @csuave, a HS friend and his parents went in on a house together when he went to University of Illinois. It was big and very nice! It had 5 bedrooms and he rented out 4 of them while he went to school there. I think his parents let him keep the monthly cash flow, so that was his spending money.
Originally, they were planning to either sell it or keep it as a rental for a few years after he graduated. But his parents ended up loving that city and area. They were living in So. CA and the father planned his retirement for around when his son would graduate. They moved into it for their retirement years.