Well, first of all, a community college only gives you an associate's degree, so it isn't an equivalent at all. The question then is whether it makes sense to spend more for an Ivy League school. That really depends on what you plan to do after you graduate. If you want to go to medical or law school, and it greatly increases your chances of getting in, then the additional earnings it makes possible will more than make up for the tuition. If you want to get into some professions, such as consulting, Wall Street, or the diplomatic corps, then you may not be able to do those things from a lesser school. But if you want to be an elementary school teacher, a nurse, or an insurance salesperson, then it may not make sense at all to go to an elite school, other than the exposure you would get to learning opportunities you might not get elsewhere.
Let me say, though, that it is not either/or. There are thousands of colleges, both public and private, that fall in between Ivy League schools and state colleges.
2007-12-16 20:01:37
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answer #1
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answered by neniaf 7
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Of course it depends on what you want to do, your personality, etc, but here is one option you may not have thought about: If there is a specific private school you have your eye on, you can contact them for a list of community college or state school classes that will transfer, and then spend your first year or two at the less expensive school. This way you can build your lower-level class foundation without going broke, and then transfer to your fancy school and be able to take the interesting upper division classes from experts in the field.
Also keep in mind that there are lots of great private schools out there that don't charge the outrageous tuition of, say, Harvard, and that the value of the education you get will depend more on how much work you put in than how much money you spent!
2007-12-16 20:07:14
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answer #2
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answered by geneticsnut 2
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Well it depends. Like at an Ivy League school, you're going to get the name recognition when you get out of college. When people ask where you graduated from and you say that you graduated from this Ivy League, your intelligence and "value" has gone up. Also, at those schools, they get some of the best people in their fields to teach, ones that have won many various prizes for their work.
So it depends on what you want from life. Just a college education or a name recognition and a possibility to learn from the best of the best.
2007-12-16 19:59:20
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answer #3
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answered by angel1219us 2
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CC is way less confusing on the strategies and the wallet, although whilst it does not do a nicely skill of transforming into waiting you for a basic college. Plus, you do not extremely get the finished 'corporation savour' at a CC. If I were you i could bypass to a 4 12 months Uni on an analogous time taking some guides at CC for the scale of the summer season. meaning you will shop purely a sprint of money on your Uni categories on an analogous time even with the incontrovertible fact that taking section in the corporation environment.
2016-10-11 11:07:50
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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