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Look at cost of living when considering as well.
EX: SUNY's tuition is cheap if your in state. But depending on where you live it could actually be more expensive.
Out of curiosity, does anyone know what processes the schools go through to determine what their tuition will be? Of course for state schools they receive state money, but aside from that, what other factors go into it?
27,000/ year
adenosine, are you from AZ? Because then it would be expenisive (in state tuition), otherwise, its about the same same as all the other schools for out of state
Yeah its not listed. You have to email/call to ask. That is what the told me.
I had no idea about the state vs private school issue (coming from Canada). So what are the tuitions for private schools like?
I wonder why midwestern is the most expensive od program right now. Kinda sucks. As a new program, I would have thought tuition would be less than it is.
I wonder why midwestern is the most expensive od program right now. Kinda sucks. As a new program, I would have thought tuition would be less than it is.
A degree is a degree, a*shole.
yup, unfortunately it is. These new schools are screwing the whole profession. Fail to get into the real schools potty mouth?
You'll feel good when you hit the oversupplied marked that your new school helped worsen. No, I am not a fan of private OD schools.
yup, unfortunately it is. These new schools are screwing the whole profession. Fail to get into the real schools potty mouth?
You'll feel good when you hit the oversupplied marked that your new school helped worsen. No, I am not a fan of private OD schools.
Because it is an unnecessary school who's only objective as a private institution is to make money. Basically students who are unqualified or rejected by other schools will pay more $$ to get their degree from them.
I know you are on crusade to cut out all new schools & all commercial OD practices but think before you post otherwise you look like a chicken with his head cut off.
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I know you are on crusade to cut out all new schools & all commercial OD practices but think before you post otherwise you look like a chicken with his head cut off.
For people who do not have OD schools in their states, public schools can be costly.
Here is a break down of the tuition + fees for public & private schools for non-residents according to opted.org:
Public:
UAB: $44,203
UCBSO: $32,466
NOVA: $25,495
IU: $31,171
Mich: $32,025
Missouri: $34,615
SUNY: $26,350
Northeastern: $25,304
OSU: $48,389
PCO: $29,945
Puerto Rico: $24,878
SCO: $22,488
UHCO: $28,974
Private:
SCCO: $26,445
ICO: $28,759
NECO: $32,252
PUCO: $28,128
MWU: ~ $27,000 (according to students on here)
WU: $28,278 (tuition and fees from WU's website)
Just look at these numbers Indiana, you can see that there is not much of a difference. In fact, Public schools are a bit more costly if you do the averages: Public - $31,254 Private - $28,477. Of course these #'s are very arbitrary because we have to factor in living costs, life style, expenses, scholarships, and gaining in state residency for some of those public schools. In the end, it isn't as bad as you make it out for everyone to believe.
I personally did not want to go to any of the public schools based on geographic reasons. The only public school I thought about was UCBSO but their non-resident tuition is higher than the private schools and cost of living in Berkeley is much more.
So yes, all of us who didn't apply to public schools were probably going to be rejected by the publics schools. And god knows that public schools don't want your money either. 🙄
You make it sound like its horrible that anyone attend a new optometry school. In case you haven't considered it, the field of optometry DOES have room for growth. I highly doubt the 50 person class sizes at midwestern are going to "screw up the whole profession" and cause an "oversupplied market" ...drama queen.
Indiana has contract seats for numerous states which dramatically decreases the tuition. On average the private schools have MUCH larger class sizes, lower entering scores, and give back next to NOTHING by means of decent research or prestige. Also, the state schools are overseen by and held accountable by larger institutions with reputations to uphold.
Besides increasing the oversupply and lowering the average entrance stats of OD schools what benefit is there for the profession concerning these new schools?
Please, I may not be an old OD (3 years post graduation) but I find it laughable that pre-opts think they know what is going on.
SCO is a private school, not a public school.
I also thought PCO and Nova were private? Maybe I'm wrong.
Thanks for admitting it!
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Thanks for admitting it!
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I find it laughable that for an educated person, you're such an ignorant f*ck. It is possible for pre-opts to know whats going on in the profession they are pursuing. Arrogance must be blinding.
Thanks for admitting it!
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Right. Last I checked PUCO is the leader in sports vision research. SCCO has many ongoing research projects going on right now. Just check their website out. To say they give back next to nothing by means of decent research shows ignorance on your behalf.
Are you also saying that all private schools (not just private OD schools) provide nothing of significance in terms of research because they are private schools?