Saturday
Jan232010
The Princeton Review Ranks "Best Value" Colleges - Save Money with Expensive Schools
Saturday, January 23, 2010 by Chris Lesinski
I'm not usually the Matt Lauer type, but this video about The Princeton Review's "Best Value" Colleges makes two good points:
- You have to apply for aid. No excuses. I don't care how big the trust fun is. If you have friends who don't apply for aid, slap them and then tell them that you'll fill out the forms in exchange for 20% of the proceeds. (You can't really do that. It's just to prove a point. But, I guess you already slapped your friend, which might prove the point also. Maybe we're over-proving here. I don't know.) The FAFSA is also important to getting work-study, which you'll want no matter how much you can afford to make it rain.
- Look for "good value" colleges, not "cheap" ones. Transferring to a cheaper school won't solve your budgetary woes! What's The Princeton Review mean by "good value"? It means that more expensive schools can actually cost you less than "cheap" ones. Spendy colleges tend to re-distribute tuition from rich people into the Financial Aid office -- and do other such friendly acts for its less-fortunate students. It's kind of messed up, but that's how it goes.
See the full list of the top 10 value public colleges and the top 10 value private colleges.
Reader Comments (5)
Can you please post the full list? I don't have a membership and have no intentions of ever getting it. Just the college names is enough.
ditto
good topic
thanks
Top 10 Best Value Colleges - Public:
1. University of Virginia
2. CUNY Hunter
3. New College of Florida
4. Florida State University
5. University of Colorado - Boulder
6. State University of New York at Binghamton
7. University of Georgia
8. Virginia Tech
9. Texas A&M
10. University of Oklahoma
Top 10 Best Value Colleges - Private:
1. Swarthmore College
2. Harvard College
3. Wesleyan College
4. Princeton University
5. Yale University
6. Williams College
7. Rice University
8. MIT
9. Amherst College
10. Wellesley
Link in the post is useless, princeton review is too busy trying to collect personal information and refuses to let you read anything without selling your soul to their marketing demons.