![]() |
You want a free edjamacation, shoved up yer ass a nickel at a time? Get an appointment to the military service academies. :D
Only one hitch... you commit to five years of service as an officer if you graduate (ten if you get pilot or navigator training). If you drop out or get kicked out in your junior or senior year, or fail to complete your commitment as an officer you owe the Feds a hefty chunk o' tuition (calculated at around $250,000 for all four years) or you can enlist. Only one thing though... no Greek system - their equivalent of pledgeship is the fourth class year! |
Quote:
On the east coast there is something called the academic common market. If a university in your state doesn't offer your choice of major (you have to make sure that no public institution has that major) you can go to an out of state school for the same cost that it would to attend your instate university. The hope scholarship applies to this aswell. Also if you are not accepted by an instate institution for nursing/teaching in Maryland, you can go to another school at a prorated cost (usually the same or less then a UM school). This has just been approved in the last year since we have 3 major universities with execellent nursing programs and everyone and the brother seems to be applying to these programs/schools. |
Texas has (or used to have.. not sure) the Texas Tomorrow Fund, which sounded similar to the program FLordia used to have.
|
I wish that my state would have adopted the high GPA and free school attitude. Im in VA and I heard of nothing like that. I graduated high school with a 3.33 and I had an "advanced" dipolma and I would have loved to go to any public college or university of my choice for free. That would have been a tremendous help to me, but NOOOOOOO VA wanted to be difficult and money hungry! Angry GC poster, Angry Angry! :(
Q |
Re: Free College?
Quote:
Lar-ned... edumacation. |
People in Iowa shouldn't throw stones.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I should add that it was Jane and Leland's desire that Stanford students never pay for college, but times changed and so did the board's impression of the situation. Later tuition increases reflected increases in costs for the university and the inability of the university endowment to keep up with those demands (its a possibility that tuition wouldn't increase nearly so much if alumni were exceedingly generous). |
They have a scholarship thing in WV but I didn't get it and it wouldn't do me any good anyway. Loans what, what.
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:37 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.