I would also recommend looking at European colleges as an alternative. If you’re willing to learn (or already know) a European language, there’s plenty of excellent colleges in Western, Central and Northern Europe that are nearly free of charge and many are on par with MIT for STEM education. The exception is Ireland/UK that can charge m…
I would also recommend looking at European colleges as an alternative. If you’re willing to learn (or already know) a European language, there’s plenty of excellent colleges in Western, Central and Northern Europe that are nearly free of charge and many are on par with MIT for STEM education. The exception is Ireland/UK that can charge more because they teach in English but everyone else only charges token tuition. Their 17 year old cohorts are also shrinking far more dramatically than American cohorts so I expect them to provide even more incentives for foreign students in the future.
I would also recommend looking at European colleges as an alternative. If you’re willing to learn (or already know) a European language, there’s plenty of excellent colleges in Western, Central and Northern Europe that are nearly free of charge and many are on par with MIT for STEM education. The exception is Ireland/UK that can charge more because they teach in English but everyone else only charges token tuition. Their 17 year old cohorts are also shrinking far more dramatically than American cohorts so I expect them to provide even more incentives for foreign students in the future.