My son is 18 and going into aerospace engineering (he FAR outpaced me in intelligence and motivation lol). He applied to 6 very competitive schools, got in to all of them, and had his top three ranked. He made his decision based on how much money he was getting from the schools. He ended picking his #3 school. Why? Literally because of money.
Also as an 18 year old, he had a very difficult time making the decision. His mom and I sat down with him with spreadsheets, etc, breaking down costs, blah blah blah. It was a difficult decision. Could he have made it on his own? Sure. Would it have been the "best" financial decision? I have no idea, but maybe not. In the end, though, after all of the talk, we allowed him to make the decision for himself.
I'm now imagining we had an "agent" of sorts - a financial advisor, someone who could negotiate with the schools to increase scholarships, who knew who to talk to and how, who had a track record of getting prospective students the best deal. I would assume that this person would have had way more influence on my kid's decision than my little spreadsheets.
Point is: 1) 18 year olds need help making significant life decisions. 2) They also have agency. 3) Money is a huge factor in those decisions. 3) In the college sports landscape, agents might have disproportionate impact on these decisions.
Also as an 18 year old, he had a very difficult time making the decision. His mom and I sat down with him with spreadsheets, etc, breaking down costs, blah blah blah. It was a difficult decision. Could he have made it on his own? Sure. Would it have been the "best" financial decision? I have no idea, but maybe not. In the end, though, after all of the talk, we allowed him to make the decision for himself.
I'm now imagining we had an "agent" of sorts - a financial advisor, someone who could negotiate with the schools to increase scholarships, who knew who to talk to and how, who had a track record of getting prospective students the best deal. I would assume that this person would have had way more influence on my kid's decision than my little spreadsheets.
Point is: 1) 18 year olds need help making significant life decisions. 2) They also have agency. 3) Money is a huge factor in those decisions. 3) In the college sports landscape, agents might have disproportionate impact on these decisions.