Actually, no, at least not until he gets state residency (Wyoming state
residency) as it's 305 dollars per credit hour out of state tuition at UWyo
alone. So he can take ONE class on that stipend.
http://uwadmnweb.uwyo.edu/fsbo/fsbo/tuition_and_fee_schedule_2005-6.htm
I went to Oregon Institute of Technology, and out of state tuition was a lot.
It is also the cheapest public school in Oregon. Heck, even my IN state
tuition was expensive. You have to take 16-18 credit hours a term to come
out with a degree in 4 years there, and 16 credit hours out of state costs
you 5,509.25 just in tuition per term, so multiply by 3 and you can see just
tuition is 16,000+ dollars.
http://www.oit.edu/Default.aspx?DN=3079,3033,3031,2652,1,Documents
That's not a cent of living expenses. Prices have gone up since '89 it would
seem.
I think he should study in Europe.
···
On Saturday 03 December 2005 11:00, Kirk Haines wrote:
On Saturday 03 December 2005 8:37 am, Daniel Schierbeck wrote:
> Here in Denmark all students recieve an education aid of approximately
> $700-800 per month. There even is an aid to high school students (though
> I can't really see the point of that) of at least $100 per month, and
> more if your parents have a low income.
>
> I'd be able to take that aid with me if I were to study abroad, though
> I'm not sure I will if I do the full 4 year period.When I went to college in 1989, I went to the University of Wyoming. In my
years there, I was always surprised at the numbers of scandanavians there
for engineering or computer science. Your educational stipend might help
explain it, though. With a stipend like that at a less expensive school
like UWyo, all you are left to cover, really, is your living expenses.Kirk Haines