ValenAlvern February 24, 2014 Share ValenAlvern Member February 24, 2014 All I know about college, is that if you can transfer credits, so do course at a community college and transfer your credits so you dont waste money and have lesser debt. Or go to Norway and not pay a dime. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Banana February 25, 2014 Share Banana Member February 25, 2014 (edited) Berea College in KY. One of the best-ranked liberal arts colleges in the US and they give a full-ride scholarship to every student. Granted, it's a work college, but working 10 hours a week in exchange for a free degree isn't a bad tradeoff. I arrived there in 2009 with about $50 in my pocket and left with zero student debt and a pretty decent degree. If your parents have a high Federal EFC, you might have to pay a little for room and board, but it never exceeded $1800/semester for me, which I paid off mostly myself with the money I made working. Edited February 25, 2014 by Banana 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Leonebluen February 26, 2014 Share Leonebluen Member February 26, 2014 As this got revived, I might as well toss in my two cents. This really depends on what you want to end up doing down the road. Ultimately, I chose to go to a lower-caliber school where I got a full ride (University of Minnesota) instead of my much more expensive first choice school (Stanford); however, I only chose this route because I intend to go to graduate school once I have completed my undergraduate studies. If your bachelors will be your terminal degree, take the school with the best program. If you intend to continue your education, minimize your debt. Contrary to other people, I advise going to Rutgers and transferring. If you want to go to graduate school, you should really pick who you want to write you references and work with them as much as possible all 3-4 years you're there. TL;DR - Best program if terminal degree, cheapest program if grad. school. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ZeroDamage March 14, 2014 Share ZeroDamage Member March 14, 2014 Chiming in late here but if you are still reading, let me add a few things. 1. Take a look at Virginia Tech. They have a great Computer Science program 2. Consider doing community college your first two years to get the basics out of the way. It is much cheaper and you can remain local most of the time. It's a great idea if money is a concern. 3. Be careful of the "Education bubble" meaning colleges are ridiculously expensive right now. You do not want to spend the rest of your life paying off your loans if it can be helped. My #2 recommendation can help a great deal with that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ValenAlvern March 15, 2014 Share ValenAlvern Member March 15, 2014 If you wanna cheap College Program, go to Norway. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheDude March 15, 2014 Share TheDude Member March 15, 2014 If you wanna cheap College Program, go to Norway. It's cheap for Norwegians (and other Europeans), i doubt they'll expand their system for non-EU citizens Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ValenAlvern March 16, 2014 Share ValenAlvern Member March 16, 2014 If you wanna cheap College Program, go to Norway. It's cheap for Norwegians (and other Europeans), i doubt they'll expand their system for non-EU citizens Ahh they changed it for foreigners? Lame. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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