<p>In State:
- UNC - Chapel Hill
- Florida
- Virginia
- William & Mary
- New College of Florida
- Georgia
- Berkeley
- Maryland
- UCLA
- UCSD</p>
<p>Out-of-State:
- UNC - Chapel Hill
- SUNY Binghampton
- SUNY Geneseo
- William & Mary
- Virginia
- UCLA
- Berkeley
- Florida
- Georgia
- Maryland</p>
<p>[Best</a> Values in Public Colleges, 2011-12](<a href=“Best College Values, 2019 | Kiplinger”>Best College Values, 2019 | Kiplinger)=ALL&id=none&sortby=out_rank&sortorder=ASC#colleges</p>
<p>I’m surprised UVA isn’t up with UNC at the top of the list since they meet need for OOS students.</p>
<p>I’m surprised U of Minnesota is not on the OOS list - only a $5,000 differential between in state and OOS.</p>
<p>And Cal and UCLA are $50,000 without aid - hardly a best value IMHO.</p>
<p>UMinn is #20 on the OOS list. I agree about the UCs.</p>
<p>
Berkeley is the only school in the top 10 that has best in class STEM fields. With the higher pay garnered by STEM majors, I’d say it’s a good value. Most of the top value schools on the list don’t excel in STEM fields.</p>
<p>W&M and New College are underrated.</p>
<p>New College has no name recognition.
It should be a great OOS choice.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Not all STEM majors find high pay at graduation – the most popular STEM major at Berkeley, Molecular and Cell Biology, does not result in particularly high pay for its graduates.</p>
<p><a href=“https://career.berkeley.edu/Major/MCB.stm[/url]”>https://career.berkeley.edu/Major/MCB.stm</a></p>
<p>Keep in mind that UNC chapel hill has a strict limit on out of state undergrads. I believe it is 10%.</p>
<p>The SUNYs are often the cheapest out of state universities for someone paying full price. However, I’d be concerned that could change over time - the legislature could decide to move the out of state costs up closer to what other states charge.</p>
<p>A number of public colleges offer merit aid for their best applicants that is designed to bring the price down closer to the in-state price. They may offer more merit aid to out of state students than in-state students, such as Pitt.</p>