It depends on what your kids want to do. Elite colleges are not selling education, except to the extent that they have to maintain standards to keep their position. They are selling networking cachet. Which is of very high value to people who want to be one of the masters of the universe, and take their chances with the inbound guillotine.
If your kids want to be doctors. engineers or archaeologists.. no, not worth the price tag. In fact, the true optium move is likely to ship them to Sweden with a note telling them to find a nice girl, naturalize via marriage and take the free ride through stockholm university. ;)
Elite colleges are not selling education, except to the extent that they have to maintain standards to keep their position. They are selling networking cachet.
I attended Swarthmore College and got a totally bitching education. I would recommend Swarthomre to anybody with better than about 740′s on her SATs. For a regular smart kid, Swarthmore educationally is probably a lot of work, and may be valuable but it is not the value proposition I got or that I understand. For me, the incredible quality of the student body and highly motivated and intelligent professors produced an education I do not think you could get no matter how good the profs are if the students were more regular.
My grad-school mate at Caltech, another place with incredible educational results that are not available at lesser institutions, attended Harvard undergrad. His education appeared to be similarly outstanding to the one I got at Swarthmore.
So elite universities may be selling networking cachet, and that may be what some of their customers intend to be buying. But for really smart kids, an elite school is a serious educational opportunity that non-elite schools cannot match.
I certainly do agree that getting a free ride through a good university is a great deal!
It depends on what your kids want to do. Elite colleges are not selling education, except to the extent that they have to maintain standards to keep their position. They are selling networking cachet. Which is of very high value to people who want to be one of the masters of the universe, and take their chances with the inbound guillotine. If your kids want to be doctors. engineers or archaeologists.. no, not worth the price tag. In fact, the true optium move is likely to ship them to Sweden with a note telling them to find a nice girl, naturalize via marriage and take the free ride through stockholm university. ;)
I attended Swarthmore College and got a totally bitching education. I would recommend Swarthomre to anybody with better than about 740′s on her SATs. For a regular smart kid, Swarthmore educationally is probably a lot of work, and may be valuable but it is not the value proposition I got or that I understand. For me, the incredible quality of the student body and highly motivated and intelligent professors produced an education I do not think you could get no matter how good the profs are if the students were more regular.
My grad-school mate at Caltech, another place with incredible educational results that are not available at lesser institutions, attended Harvard undergrad. His education appeared to be similarly outstanding to the one I got at Swarthmore.
So elite universities may be selling networking cachet, and that may be what some of their customers intend to be buying. But for really smart kids, an elite school is a serious educational opportunity that non-elite schools cannot match.
I certainly do agree that getting a free ride through a good university is a great deal!