<p>Dear Cornellians:</p>
<p>Below is a list of universities that meet 100% of need, each with a pair of figures that show the average of first year loan amount and the average of yearly loan for all undergrads, respectively. If you look closely, Cornell's figures are significantly higher than those of any other school in the list ($10,400/$8,157 compared with Harvard's $2,489/$2,377, for example).</p>
<p>I have two questions:
1. Do you think those figures are correct?
2. Why do you think they are much higher?</p>
<p>By the way, I copied the list from a message posted by calmom in the "Parents Forum".</p>
<p>Harvard University (MA) ($2489 $2,377)
Princeton University (NJ) ($0 $0)
Yale University (CT) ($1,447 $2,410)
University of Pennsylvania ($3,143 $4,049)
Duke University (NC) ($3,700 $5,009)
Stanford University (CA) ($2,675 $2,860)
California Tech ($1,798 $1,318)
Mass Inst. of Technology ($3,321 $3,897)
Columbia (NY) ($3,465 $4930)
Dartmouth College (NH) ($3,168 $4,318)
Northwestern University (IL) ($2,424 $4,148)
Cornell University (NY) ($10,400 $8,157)
U. of Chicago (IL) ($4,474 $5,484)
Rice University (TX) ($2,532 $3,069)
Univ of Notre Dame (IN) ($3,603 $5,278)
Emory University (GA) ($3,129 $4,890)
Georgetown University (DC) ($2,010 $3,634)
University of Virginia* ($3,771 $4,395)
Tufts University (MA) ($2,911 $4,219)
Boston College (MA) ($3,707 $4,721)</p>