You can obtain this information by going to www.collegeboard.com/splash/ and using the sites College MatchMaker search engine, or you can also click on the related links below which will take you directly to the site. You can research colleges and universities by name, or by programs of study, or by geographical location, size, or combinations of part or all of them etc. The site will provide you with a list of institutions based on your request. It will give you the schools background, accreditation, degree offerings, programs of study, entrance requirements, tuition and fees, room and board, athletic programs etc. and a link to each institutions official web page. Make sure the college or university has a regional accreditation (most important). Practice navigating this site. It will be well worth the time and effort.
yes
A great graduate school can cost a lot of money. Tuition at a top 20 university is $30,000 per year.
Some schools offer programs in which you teach a few classes in exchange for tuition. Most Graduate schools offer ways to attend for free.
Portland " Tuition Cost: Undergraduate residents $5,808, nonresidents $15,696 for the 2010 " 2011 school year Rockport " Tuition Cost: Graduate $11,400, Professional Certificate $6,000 per term for the 2009 " 2010 school year
Approximately 30% of Chilean adults aged 25-64 have attained a college degree.
The exact tuition you will pay at City University Seattle will depend on how many credits you take, what school you take classes in (school of education, arts and sciences...), what degree you are seeking (undergraduate or graduate), and costs like fees and books. The two links below will give you more information on their tuition and fees.
I have heard that it is typically $31,000 a year depending on school, location, and program. Assistance, loans, and grants are always an option and more power to you if you are able to obtain them. Also consider checking with your employer to see if the company covers any of the tuition costs.
It's about $50,000 per academic year, so a total of $200,000 over 4 years. Many qualify for financial aid, so they won't pay as much (i.e., those who make under $60,000 don't have to pay for anything to the school itself [tuition, room, board, books], and those who make under $100,000 don't have to pay tuition [which is about $37,000 per year]).
When he was alive there was no school so he didn't graduate from school.
Tuition remission / remittance is the setting aside responsibility of payment due for education rendered. Essentially, if a school says "We offer 100% tuition remittance," they're saying you don't pay tuition for whatever period of study they list. Tuition remission is sometimes offered to state employees, or employees of higher-education institutions. It is sometimes extended to their immediate families, including spouses and children. Tuition remission programs are sometimes offered as compensation for graduate student teaching assistant or research fellow appointments. Tuition remission programs may remit, or lay aside, part or all of the normally required tuition. Examples are the Massachusetts state tuition remittance program or the University of Minnesota Graduate School tuition remittance program (linked below). On a related note, a tuition remission form would be a document a student completes and submits that proves they meet the particular school, department or employer's standards to qualify for remission.
No, medical school is the graduate school for medicine.
It depends. If a school is closed for a few days for weather or other emergencies, it would probably not affect tuition. If a school is closed permanently, they could not charge tuition.