Stanford School of Medicine Won't Follow Harvard's or Yale's Financial Aid Initiatives
Students at the Stanford School of Medicine will not be offered the same type of tuition breaks students attending rival medical schools Harvard and Yale will see next year.
Harvard Medical School and the Yale School of Medicine recently announced they are eliminating the expected family contribution for households that earn less $120,000 and $100,000, respectively.
Charles Prober, Stanford’s senior associate dean of medical student education, told The Stanford Daily that there are no plans to extend such an offer to Stanford medical students (“No Change in Store for Med School Aid,” May 5, 2008).
Stanford a Leader in Minimizing Medical Students Loan Debt
However, he pointed out that Stanford is already a leader in medical school affordability. Stanford graduates have less student loan debt than those who graduate from competing schools, he said. Stanford’s 2007 graduating class had a debt of $78,000 in student loans, compared to $98,953 at Harvard and $115,385 at Yale.
The median medical school debt is $140,000, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges.
Stanford also sets a cap on the amount of federal student loans that can be borrowed each year, which this year is $13,500. If students have remaining tuition costs after the estimated parental contribution is determined, the school covers up to $30,000 of a student’s remaining costs with a need-based grant.
Student Loans Aren’t the Only Option
Students must cover any remaining costs with private student loans or other sources but Stanford, Prober said, offers its students a number of alternatives to student loans.
Medical students can earn up to $72,000 in Stanford’s Medical Scholars research Program by doing health-related research projects. Students can also offset their tuition costs by working as teaching assistants, a job in which they can earn about $18,000 per quarter. After 13 quarters, Stanford drops its tuition costs by 80 percent.
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