quote:
Originally posted by TPM:
Let me pose a question to you all. If you could afford to send your son to school for 4 years, and his dream school offered no or little scholarship because they needed it for others, but was highly recruited, would you turn it down if you felt that he was getting a good education (the primary reason to go to school) and playing for a winning team or played in a highly visible and successful conference team...absolutely not, I wouldn't.
Yes....For the following reasons.
1. Who determines need? The family who has saved and planned for their kids education. I think would be appropriate to
make that determination. In my neck of the beach, the mom of a family of who had to forgo her weekly nail appointment
has fallen on hard times. "Need" in my opinion is relative. And quite frankly any monies saved due to a scholarship,
which in my opinion is earned and not given would be applied to grad school anyway.
2. If your a highly recruited player, you'll have opportunities to play for other high profile winning program. Putting
the quality of the program aside, it really is how good of a education your getting. And how is that meassured? To me
it means your marketable when you graduate in your chosen major.
3. " The dream school for education " Recent conversations with a UC Prof., may shed some light. Student(A) attends
Stanford and graduates with a 3.0. Student(B) graduates from Big State U with a 3.2. Providing test scores are the
same who gets the nod for grad school.... Big State U. And this guy sits on the board that decides on who's in and
who's out. Basically it's the same as HS if your looking towards grad school. It's all about GPA and test scores.
However Stanford carries more weight if you decide not to go to grad school. Grades, test score and a couple of years
of experience trumps everyhring.
JMHO.