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Showing Original Post only (View all)Stanford just went tuition-free for family incomes under $125K and total assets under $300K, [View all]
excluding some retirement funds.
Princeton did something similar a while back. All the heavily endowed schools should, IMO.
http://www.vox.com/2015/4/1/8328091/stanford-tuition-financial-aid
If a student's parents make less than $125,000 per year, and if they have assets of less than $300,000, excluding retirement accounts, the parents won't be expected to pay anything toward their children's Stanford tuition. Families with incomes lower than $65,000 won't have to contribute to room and board, either.
Students themselves will have to pay up to $5,000 each year from summer earnings, savings, and part-time work. There's no rule that parents can't cover their students' required contribution.
Stanford is much more generous toward middle-class and upper-middle class students than the federal government is. Most students who get subsidized loans and federal Pell Grants come from families making less than $60,000 per year. But it also enrolls an outsize proportion of wealthy students. In 2010, the university's director of financial aid said the median family income at Stanford was around $125,000.
On the other hand, only 14 percent of entering freshmen got federal Pell Grants in 2012, which typically go to students from families making less than $50,000 per year. Nationally, 41 percent of undergrads received Pell Grants.
Students themselves will have to pay up to $5,000 each year from summer earnings, savings, and part-time work. There's no rule that parents can't cover their students' required contribution.
Stanford is much more generous toward middle-class and upper-middle class students than the federal government is. Most students who get subsidized loans and federal Pell Grants come from families making less than $60,000 per year. But it also enrolls an outsize proportion of wealthy students. In 2010, the university's director of financial aid said the median family income at Stanford was around $125,000.
On the other hand, only 14 percent of entering freshmen got federal Pell Grants in 2012, which typically go to students from families making less than $50,000 per year. Nationally, 41 percent of undergrads received Pell Grants.
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Stanford just went tuition-free for family incomes under $125K and total assets under $300K, [View all]
pnwmom
Apr 2015
OP
Fantastic, good for Stanford & CA. This is exactly what the US needs to do, the way we used to!
appalachiablue
Apr 2015
#2
16% of all students there get Pell Grants, the best available measure of % of low-income
ND-Dem
Apr 2015
#25
Pell grants and Federal Student Loans are not available to all low income students.
stone space
Apr 2015
#47
First, Pell Grants aren't loans. Second, if you meet the requirements, you have access.
ND-Dem
Apr 2015
#92
Isn't there also a rule regarding point averages? You have to keep your grades up.
jwirr
Apr 2015
#60
once you're accepted to an accredited school if you meet the income guidelines, basically
ND-Dem
Apr 2015
#93
Dunno about that but UCLA & UC Berkeley have a much larger percent of students getting
ND-Dem
Apr 2015
#26
and i found some data about stanford's black undergrad enrollment; problem is, it seems to
ND-Dem
Apr 2015
#31
several years later were the court cases - the ones I recall involved the U of Michigan
salin
Apr 2015
#100
There's still a 'Donut Hole' between Pell Grant recipients and being able to afford full tuition
Brother Buzz
Apr 2015
#34
which they can only do because they discriminate against the poor in admissions
Man from Pickens
Apr 2015
#6
but you have the satisfaction of knowing you did the right thing, which is something at least;
ND-Dem
Apr 2015
#32
That sounds hard. Working 65-100 hours a week and it's still possible to maintain your sanity?
ND-Dem
Apr 2015
#40
Thanks; you helped me feel better about my situation. I agree with your take. In theory --
ND-Dem
Apr 2015
#46
Yes -- and that is true for many. But now Stanford is expanding the number of students
pnwmom
Apr 2015
#12
Should we thank the President and Elizabeth Warren for jawboning the tuition and affordability issue
kelliekat44
Apr 2015
#35
Both have done a good deal to spotlight national attention on college education costs & the loan-
appalachiablue
Apr 2015
#111
Well, the average cost of attenance for San Francisco State University is $6468/year
SickOfTheOnePct
Apr 2015
#52
Oh and also, I never claimed anything at all about present day costs at SFSU.
Quantess
Apr 2015
#108
I meant only that a college education has become so expensive that you can earn over $100K a year
merrily
Apr 2015
#61