| My dmv child just received an offer of $80k total (so $20k per year). So they can be quite generous. |
| ‘26 DS got $15k a year for CS. 4.4w, 1550 Sat. Don’t go but a nice offer from Pitt. |
| In state with similar stats and still nothing. |
| My OOS kid was offered 10k/year last year. 4.0 uw, high rigor, TO, excellent ECs/leadership. Went somewhere else. |
| My OOS DC just was offered $15k/year. 4.0UW/high rigor. 1490 SAT, very good ECs especially for major but no national awards. If they eventually get into the honors program it will be a top choice. |
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Class of 24, received $5K/yr for Dietrich, matriculated elsewhere.
Found an old webpage from before the pandemic. Suggests SATs should be 1450. Our DC was 1430, exactly at the score line to be NM Commended. |
| Last year our daughter received 10K per year OOS for CS. 1520, 4.0 UW, highest rigor. 4s and 5s on APs including BC calc. |
| Are essays part of the consideration for merit? |
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Rumor is they are more generous the earlier you apply.
DS got a letter last night with 15k/year merit. Comp Sci major, 4.8 weighted, 1530. He applied on Labor Day. |
In my view that’s pretty terrible but typical of state schools. If you want good merit, go private. |
Just fyi…Pitt doesn’t look at AP scores at all for admission…they don’t transfer over from the common app. |
| Pitt is over hyped in these circles |
My DS got the same package with a 1400. He got much more money other places including private schools and UMD. |
My kid got 10k/year to Dietrich TO. I don't think test scores matter that much if an applicant is strong overall. |
Disagree. Fantastic school - especially after the massive donation from Dietrich ($125 million to college of arts and sciences). If anything, DCUM underrates it as an easy early acceptance. It hits the sweet spot for many students, re: size, urban with green space and D1 football (hard to find good football in a city school), amazing for pre-med/pre-health, psychology, philosophy (ranked globally), and English. Huge rare languages department. Many small classes - better student-teacher ratio than most publics. And lots of opportunities for internships in the city during the school year. And the students are happy, not depressed/bitter/overstressed from a hyper competitive peer group. |