Nearly all majors under $30k for foreign students. Far less for Canadians and even less for Quebecois.
This is far less than 1/2 of what it costs to go to a private school in America for an American student.
You are quoting the DMD tuition ($79k).
Then note that the Canadian $ is only 77% of the American dollar.
I made it clear that the figure I used was the high end of the tuition scale. But even the lowest value in the table converts to more than $20K US which is thousands more than what you quoted for UMass.
Then note that the Canadian $ is only 77% of the American dollar.
I made it clear that the figure I used was the high end of the tuition scale. But even the lowest value in the table converts to more than $20K US which is thousands more than what you quoted for UMass.
1. You are comparing the tuition for foreign students at McGill with instate MA students at the public state school.
2. For Americans who do not live in MA, the tuition is $38k plus American dollars.
3. McGill is a private school with a big, international reputation. Hence we really should be looking at schools like BU, BC, Harvard. BU is $61k for the upcoming year (tuition alone). Nearly triple what it would cost you vs. going to McGill.
I made it clear that the figure I used was the high end of the tuition scale. But even the lowest value in the table converts to more than $20K US which is thousands more than what you quoted for UMass.
1. You are comparing the tuition for foreign students at McGill with instate MA students at the public state school.
2. For Americans who do not live in MA, the tuition is $38k plus American dollars.
3. McGill is a private school with a big, international reputation. Hence we really should be looking at schools like BU, BC, Harvard. BU is $61k for the upcoming year (tuition alone). Nearly triple what it would cost you vs. going to McGill.
YOU are the one who made the initial comparison between McGill and UMass. I merely provided facts surrounding your claim.
3. McGill is a private school with a big, international reputation.
First time I can recall reading something C9 wrote and agreeing with it.
McGill is an excellent school with a very good reputation around the world for many of its programs.
Canadian universities are all pretty good, some better than others in specific programs, and some having stronger reputations abroad, but the range between best and worst for most schools is fairly narrow (relative to, say, many foreign countries that might have a couple of excellent ones and a crapload of crappy ones), with a few outliers of sub-standard schools. McGill is definitely one of the better large Canadian universities with relatively complete undergraduate and graduate programs, with strong reputations both inside and and outside Canada.
1. You are comparing the tuition for foreign students at McGill with instate MA students at the public state school.
2. For Americans who do not live in MA, the tuition is $38k plus American dollars.
3. McGill is a private school with a big, international reputation. Hence we really should be looking at schools like BU, BC, Harvard. BU is $61k for the upcoming year (tuition alone). Nearly triple what it would cost you vs. going to McGill.
YOU are the one who made the initial comparison between McGill and UMass. I merely provided facts surrounding your claim.
And for the non MA resident American, you can go to McGill and pay about 1/2 of the tuition you would pay at UMass for most majors.
have to be very careful with tuition data...usually it is based on full sticker price but few pay that. Most get financial aid. At Cal State Dominguez, for example, 78% of the student body receives grants, And at very prestigious schools if your family is not rich, it becomes almost free to go there.
Also, interest rates on student loan debt is so much lower now than in the past...that the monthly nut to pay student loans is often no higher than it used to be, even though more is owed.
Finally, most people go to a state institution and pay in-state tuition and at many schools, in state tuition is not all that oppressive, esp after financial aid.
double-finally, college grad salaries have gone so high these days that loans are becoming less of a crisis. Income inequality has a plus I suppose.
3. McGill is a private school with a big, international reputation.
First time I can recall reading something C9 wrote and agreeing with it.
McGill is an excellent school with a very good reputation around the world for many of its programs.
Canadian universities are all pretty good, some better than others in specific programs, and some having stronger reputations abroad, but the range between best and worst for most schools is fairly narrow (relative to, say, many foreign countries that might have a couple of excellent ones and a crapload of crappy ones), with a few outliers of sub-standard schools. McGill is definitely one of the better large Canadian universities with relatively complete undergraduate and graduate programs, with strong reputations both inside and and outside Canada.
Daughter’s undergraduate minor was Canadian Studies. Boise State is one university that offers it. Anyway, she studied at Montreal University one summer. Education was all in French, which she is fluent. Reasonable cost, and a positive experience.
have to be very careful with tuition data...usually it is based on full sticker price but few pay that. Most get financial aid. At Cal State Dominguez, for example, 78% of the student body receives grants, And at very prestigious schools if your family is not rich, it becomes almost free to go there.
Also, interest rates on student loan debt is so much lower now than in the past...that the monthly nut to pay student loans is often no higher than it used to be, even though more is owed.
Finally, most people go to a state institution and pay in-state tuition and at many schools, in state tuition is not all that oppressive, esp after financial aid.
double-finally, college grad salaries have gone so high these days that loans are becoming less of a crisis. Income inequality has a plus I suppose.
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67 days since the low.
Daughter’s law school loans were in the 5.5-6.5% range. We focused on the higher interest rate loans, while managing the monthly principle and interest payments.
have to be very careful with tuition data...usually it is based on full sticker price but few pay that. Most get financial aid. At Cal State Dominguez, for example, 78% of the student body receives grants, And at very prestigious schools if your family is not rich, it becomes almost free to go there.
Also, interest rates on student loan debt is so much lower now than in the past...that the monthly nut to pay student loans is often no higher than it used to be, even though more is owed.
Finally, most people go to a state institution and pay in-state tuition and at many schools, in state tuition is not all that oppressive, esp after financial aid.
double-finally, college grad salaries have gone so high these days that loans are becoming less of a crisis. Income inequality has a plus I suppose.
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67 days since the low.
We got pretty lucky. My stepson starts this fall for his masters in statistics at Michigan. There are only 4 slots for the scholarship program he was seeking and he was on the waiting list but all 4 backed out so he became the only one in the program. Not only did that save about $150,000 but he also gets a monthly stipend of $2,900.
have to be very careful with tuition data...usually it is based on full sticker price but few pay that. Most get financial aid. At Cal State Dominguez, for example, 78% of the student body receives grants, And at very prestigious schools if your family is not rich, it becomes almost free to go there.
Also, interest rates on student loan debt is so much lower now than in the past...that the monthly nut to pay student loans is often no higher than it used to be, even though more is owed.
Finally, most people go to a state institution and pay in-state tuition and at many schools, in state tuition is not all that oppressive, esp after financial aid.
double-finally, college grad salaries have gone so high these days that loans are becoming less of a crisis. Income inequality has a plus I suppose.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
67 days since the low.
We got pretty lucky. My stepson starts this fall for his masters in statistics at Michigan. There are only 4 slots for the scholarship program he was seeking and he was on the waiting list but all 4 backed out so he became the only one in the program. Not only did that save about $150,000 but he also gets a monthly stipend of $2,900.
Congrats to your stepson. My wife, in addition to her graduate degree from Stanford, has a graduate degree from The University of Michigan in Public Policy which involved lots of statistics.
We got pretty lucky. My stepson starts this fall for his masters in statistics at Michigan. There are only 4 slots for the scholarship program he was seeking and he was on the waiting list but all 4 backed out so he became the only one in the program. Not only did that save about $150,000 but he also gets a monthly stipend of $2,900.
Congrats to your stepson. My wife, in addition to her graduate degree from Stanford, has a graduate degree from The University of Michigan in Public Policy which involved lots of statistics.
Thanks. Congrats on your wife. It is pretty cool because my dad got his MBA from Michigan many, many years ago.
have to be very careful with tuition data...usually it is based on full sticker price but few pay that. Most get financial aid. At Cal State Dominguez, for example, 78% of the student body receives grants, And at very prestigious schools if your family is not rich, it becomes almost free to go there.
Also, interest rates on student loan debt is so much lower now than in the past...that the monthly nut to pay student loans is often no higher than it used to be, even though more is owed.
Finally, most people go to a state institution and pay in-state tuition and at many schools, in state tuition is not all that oppressive, esp after financial aid.
double-finally, college grad salaries have gone so high these days that loans are becoming less of a crisis. Income inequality has a plus I suppose.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
67 days since the low.
We got pretty lucky. My stepson starts this fall for his masters in statistics at Michigan. There are only 4 slots for the scholarship program he was seeking and he was on the waiting list but all 4 backed out so he became the only one in the program. Not only did that save about $150,000 but he also gets a monthly stipend of $2,900.
Congratulations. In my years as a college coach I learned to work the various scholarship, grant, and loan programs. As Seattle noted much has changed over the last thirty years.
Three of eight indexes on our world watch list posted gains through August 22, 2022. The top performer is London's FTSE 100 with a YTD gain of 2.02%. India's BSE SENSEX is in second with a gain of 0.89% and Tokyo's Nikkei 225 is in third with a gain of 0.01%. Coming in last is Germany's DAXK with a loss of 19.33% YTD.
Crazy to think that these LR crazies will conveniently cancel his fifty+ years of public service just because they are unhappy with his handling of covid. Pandemic policies are never popular and necessarily wrestle with a tradeoff between freedom and death count.
Crazy to think that these LR crazies will conveniently cancel his fifty+ years of public service just because they are unhappy with his handling of covid. Pandemic policies are never popular and necessarily wrestle with a tradeoff between freedom and death count.
How about his unethical funding of Wuhan gain of function research?