Page 1 of 1
GW v. W&M (with scholarship)
Posted: Thu Mar 12, 2015 3:05 pm
by ceelee21
I am debating between GW at full sticker and William & Mary with a $10,000 scholarship (I am in-state so overall cost would be ~$21,900/year). I definitely want to be in DC or NY after graduation (I have no desire to stay in Southern VA). My parents would cover the cost of tuition so I don't have to take out loans, but if I went to GW I would have to live at home or take out loans for an apartment/living expenses. Thoughts?
Re: GW v. W&M (with scholarship)
Posted: Thu Mar 12, 2015 3:07 pm
by TheSpanishMain
ceelee21 wrote:I am debating between GW at full sticker and William & Mary with a $10,000 scholarship (I am in-state so overall cost would be ~$21,900/year). I definitely want to be in DC or NY after graduation (I have no desire to stay in Southern VA). My parents would cover the cost of tuition so I don't have to take out loans, but if I went to GW I would have to live at home or take out loans for an apartment/living expenses. Thoughts?
If you have parents willing to foot your entire tuition bill, then you should retake the LSAT and try to get into better schools.
But if you could theoretically graduate from GW completely debt free (parents pay tuition and you live at home) then that's not a bad deal at all. But LOL at taking out loans to rent a DC apartment just so you don't have to live with your family.
Re: GW v. W&M (with scholarship)
Posted: Thu Mar 12, 2015 3:08 pm
by sublime
..
Re: GW v. W&M (with scholarship)
Posted: Thu Mar 12, 2015 3:15 pm
by zombie mcavoy
sublime wrote:In order to receive the best feedback in this forum, please provide as much of the following information in your original post as possible:
-The schools you are considering
-The total Cost of Attendance (COA) of each. COA = cost of tuition + fees + books + cost of living (COL) + accumulated interest - scholarships. Here is a helpful calculator.
-How you will be financing your COA, i.e. loans, family, or savings
-Where you are from and where you want to work, and other places where you have significant ties (if any)
-Your general career goals
-Your LSAT/GPA numbers
-How many times you have taken the LSAT
But you should probably retake.
yo mod we should update the above to inquire about current career & salary/non-law career prospects. Opportunity cost of attendance should really factor into our boilerplate analysis.
Re: GW v. W&M (with scholarship)
Posted: Thu Mar 12, 2015 3:19 pm
by sublime
..
Re: GW v. W&M (with scholarship)
Posted: Thu Mar 12, 2015 3:27 pm
by BigZuck
People are already overly obsessed with anonymity on this site and people IRL are really weird about sharing info about salary, etc. I wonder if having that on there would just inspire people to ignore the sticky even more
Just a thought, obviously I think that's an important thing to have in the calculus
OP- retake. Don't waste your parents money on a school like GW, at least waste it on GULC or UVA.
Re: GW v. W&M (with scholarship)
Posted: Thu Mar 12, 2015 3:39 pm
by zombie mcavoy
True. We could combat that by making it less onerous in general. E.g.:
-The schools you are considering
, the scholarships you have been offered, and each school's estimated cost of attendance (as listed on http://www.lawschooltransparency.com)
-
The total Cost of Attendance (COA) of each. COA = cost of tuition + fees + books + cost of living (COL) + accumulated interest - scholarships. Here is a helpful calculator.
-How you will be financing your COA, i.e. loans, family, or savings
-Where
you are from and where do you want to work and where do you have significant regional ties?
-Your
current career & non-law career prospects, and your specific goals for a legal career"
-Your LSAT
scores/GPA numbers
-How many times you have taken the LSAT