(2) Brian MacQuarrie, US Offers Tallies of Colleges' Costs; Aid programs bring surprises. Boston Globe, Feb 20, 2013 (front page).
http://www.boston.com/yourcampus ... ring_surprises.html
Quote:
"An average net price of $18,277 a year to attend Harvard University, compared with $32,493 for Northeastern University. The numbers defy common expectations because the score card takes into account scholarships and grants that do not have to be repaid. Subtracting those from the official sticker price provides a more realistic picture of what the school would probably cost a typical student.
"For a Harvard undergraduate, students from families with incomes below $65,000 generally pay nothing to attend. Families with incomes between $65,000 and $150,000 pay up to 10 percent of their family income. Harvard is need blind, meaning that financial need is not an impediment to admission.
"In Harvard’s case, the total figure [sticker price] is $52,652 for tuition, room, board, and fees; at Northeastern, the comparable cost is $53,226. At Boston University, the annual total bill is approximately $56,000, but the average net cost [after deduction of grants, scholarship and discounts (such as enticement during recruitment)] is $29,899.
Note:
(a) The report is based on
Press release: Education Department Releases College Scorecard to Help Students Choose Best College for Them. US DEpartment of Education, Feb 13, 2013
http://www.ed.gov/news/press-rel ... -choose-best-colleg
("Consumers can access a College Scorecard for every degree-granting institution starting today at whitehouse.gov/scorecard")
(b) Northeastern University
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northeastern_University
(private; established in 1898 at a Boston YMCA)
Its noted cooperative education (co-op) program used to require five years to get a bachelor's degree, spending a year in factories.
(c) Financial Aid. Harvard College, undated.
http://www.admissions.college.ha ... cial_aid/index.html
Quote:
"Our goal in admissions and financial aid is clear: We want to bring the best people to Harvard, regardless of their ability to pay — and we do. About 70 percent of our students receive some form of aid, with over 60 percent receiving need–based scholarships.
"Admission to Harvard is need-blind * * * Financial aid at Harvard is entirely need–based
(d) Of course, it WAS not the case. Antitrust Division, US Department of Justice FORCED eight Ivy League schools plus MIT, to cease and desist. See
United States v Brown University in Providence in the State of Rhode Island and Provindence Plantations (CA3 1993) 5 F.3d 658. https://bulk.resource.org/courts ... 3d.658.92-1911.html
(MIT was the only member of the Overlap Group which defied US, spent millions to defend an antitrust action and lost)
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