It is amazing how many members here think the orientals invented the piano. Just like gunpowder.
If I were beginning I'd would pick up a nice spinet console for $40 to $100 at Goodwill or Salvation Army. Spinets weigh about 200 lb and will fit in the trunk of my car if I slide them on the back up a board. I heard a very nice Mason & Hamlin at Goodwill last year for $40. It was even in tune.
Check that every key works, there are no broken strings, the hammers and dampers are not visibly worn or mouse eaten, the soundboard is not visibly cracked. Check the hammer shafts are straight and not visibly rubbing each other. Check the damper lifter (right) pedal works, these often get damaged in the move. Left and middle pedals in cheap pianos often didn't do much from the factory.
There are hundreds of these going to the dump every year because Grandma's treasure is in the way of the new big screen television.
Spinets are not fast enough for fifth year students. One piano student in twenty makes it that far. For $100-$200 you can have a decent second line 39-40 inch console that will last you a lifetime. Brands to seek, Baldwin, Acrosonic, Hamilton, Sohmer, Wurlitzer, Chickering, Mason & Hamlin, Goodman, Steinway. Brands to avoid, Winter, Kimball, Betsy Ross. I've got a $1000 1941 Steinway 40 with really great tone and speed and really ugly veneer damaged by a child about 1945. It was horribly out of tune when I bought it, hadn't been tuned in 44 years. Seven passes tuning in 2010 and I haven't tuned it again for three years. Stable tuning is the difference between a $1000 Steinway and a $200 Sohmer.