To me, going to the right college is kind of subjective when trying to determine if it's worth the money. If you're going to Brown or Yale, Harvard I think it's a no brainer to spend upwards of $100k a year for a full time residential student. You'll make it back in probably 2 to 3 years then it's all gravy. Where I think it gets sketchy is when a private college that has local clout, good reputation, excellent education and charges $75k a year. Then the student likely will spent 10 years paying the loan. Maybe longer. That's not a good return on your investment. It could be, but it's not the same odds of big success as the Ivy League colleges.
In my own case I had to look at the investment, my odds of finishing, and the return of the kind of work I was seeking and most importantly, the financial shape I was in while going to school. It didn't make sense to go to a 4 year college or to get a generic 2 year associates, It made better sense to go to a 2 year trade school, then buy into certifications. The right certification from the right groups can be just a lucrative as the right college. They're not cheap, the average cost can run about $10k on up, but they're gold if you have a string of letters by your business name. i have 3 letters now, but the total for me was less because I was going through a company and had the financial help of the associations. Bottom line now I don't have loans to pay.
So I have to ask. Is it better to have a degree from a great college and paying a $100k loan and a job with a salary of $75k or $75K job with no loan. Who's making more? Who's going to make more? Like I said, it's kind of subjective. Think what mom and dad's think when they send they kid to Brown and when he graduates he decides to devote his life to medieval renaissance. The ole retirement they looked forward to takes wings!
Have an idea of what you wanna do, figure out how to get there , then put the numbers together. That'd be my advice.
In my own case I had to look at the investment, my odds of finishing, and the return of the kind of work I was seeking and most importantly, the financial shape I was in while going to school. It didn't make sense to go to a 4 year college or to get a generic 2 year associates, It made better sense to go to a 2 year trade school, then buy into certifications. The right certification from the right groups can be just a lucrative as the right college. They're not cheap, the average cost can run about $10k on up, but they're gold if you have a string of letters by your business name. i have 3 letters now, but the total for me was less because I was going through a company and had the financial help of the associations. Bottom line now I don't have loans to pay.
So I have to ask. Is it better to have a degree from a great college and paying a $100k loan and a job with a salary of $75k or $75K job with no loan. Who's making more? Who's going to make more? Like I said, it's kind of subjective. Think what mom and dad's think when they send they kid to Brown and when he graduates he decides to devote his life to medieval renaissance. The ole retirement they looked forward to takes wings!
Have an idea of what you wanna do, figure out how to get there , then put the numbers together. That'd be my advice.
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