With these stats, what schools....

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kansas, Iowa, Michigan State

Big state schools aren’t big on merit aid for out of staters.


Iowa State has decent merit aid for out of staters.
Anonymous
KU out of state awards (aka discounts) listed at link below (scroll down). All stats based and no limit to how many students can receive them.

https://admissions.ku.edu/tuition-scholarship/freshman
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid



There are plenty of great places for your kid.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid

My kid had a 3.85 unweighted and a 33 ACT (so I guess roughly equivalent to OP's kid's SAT score). He applied to a lot of public and private schools in the 40-100 range, including some on your list, and got merit aid at all except Lehigh- the problem is that much of the merit aid at these schools is what I'd call the "coupon" variety- $12k/year, $15k/year, $18k/year kinda stuff. For example, he got the highest scholarship at UVM - The Presidential at $20K year - but even with that it still costs almost $40K/year. We were trying to bring costs down to UMD in-state, and none of the schools offered enough to do it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid

My kid had a 3.85 unweighted and a 33 ACT (so I guess roughly equivalent to OP's kid's SAT score). He applied to a lot of public and private schools in the 40-100 range, including some on your list, and got merit aid at all except Lehigh- the problem is that much of the merit aid at these schools is what I'd call the "coupon" variety- $12k/year, $15k/year, $18k/year kinda stuff. For example, he got the highest scholarship at UVM - The Presidential at $20K year - but even with that it still costs almost $40K/year. We were trying to bring costs down to UMD in-state, and none of the schools offered enough to do it.


Right, that's why the sentence prior to your bolding was "Instate will be hard to beat though." But maybe close enough for some budgets.

And congrats because UMD is great - as good or better than UVM, although I love that school also.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid

My kid had a 3.85 unweighted and a 33 ACT (so I guess roughly equivalent to OP's kid's SAT score). He applied to a lot of public and private schools in the 40-100 range, including some on your list, and got merit aid at all except Lehigh- the problem is that much of the merit aid at these schools is what I'd call the "coupon" variety- $12k/year, $15k/year, $18k/year kinda stuff. For example, he got the highest scholarship at UVM - The Presidential at $20K year - but even with that it still costs almost $40K/year. We were trying to bring costs down to UMD in-state, and none of the schools offered enough to do it.


Right, that's why the sentence prior to your bolding was "Instate will be hard to beat though." But maybe close enough for some budgets.

And congrats because UMD is great - as good or better than UVM, although I love that school also.


You lost all credibility there.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid

My kid had a 3.85 unweighted and a 33 ACT (so I guess roughly equivalent to OP's kid's SAT score). He applied to a lot of public and private schools in the 40-100 range, including some on your list, and got merit aid at all except Lehigh- the problem is that much of the merit aid at these schools is what I'd call the "coupon" variety- $12k/year, $15k/year, $18k/year kinda stuff. For example, he got the highest scholarship at UVM - The Presidential at $20K year - but even with that it still costs almost $40K/year. We were trying to bring costs down to UMD in-state, and none of the schools offered enough to do it.


Right, that's why the sentence prior to your bolding was "Instate will be hard to beat though." But maybe close enough for some budgets.

And congrats because UMD is great - as good or better than UVM, although I love that school also.


You lost all credibility there.

Np. Huh? why would she lose credibility? I have no skin in the game - I have no affiliation at all with UMD - but it's a better school by pretty much every single objective measure, as well as subjective rankings like US news and the WS rankings.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid

My kid had a 3.85 unweighted and a 33 ACT (so I guess roughly equivalent to OP's kid's SAT score). He applied to a lot of public and private schools in the 40-100 range, including some on your list, and got merit aid at all except Lehigh- the problem is that much of the merit aid at these schools is what I'd call the "coupon" variety- $12k/year, $15k/year, $18k/year kinda stuff. For example, he got the highest scholarship at UVM - The Presidential at $20K year - but even with that it still costs almost $40K/year. We were trying to bring costs down to UMD in-state, and none of the schools offered enough to do it.


Right, that's why the sentence prior to your bolding was "Instate will be hard to beat though." But maybe close enough for some budgets.

And congrats because UMD is great - as good or better than UVM, although I love that school also.


You lost all credibility there.

Np. Huh? why would she lose credibility? I have no skin in the game - I have no affiliation at all with UMD - but it's a better school by pretty much every single objective measure, as well as subjective rankings like US news and the WS rankings.


"as good" part, I think. Like saying "your kid is as good or better than my kid" rather than "your kid is better than my kid". Get that?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid

My kid had a 3.85 unweighted and a 33 ACT (so I guess roughly equivalent to OP's kid's SAT score). He applied to a lot of public and private schools in the 40-100 range, including some on your list, and got merit aid at all except Lehigh- the problem is that much of the merit aid at these schools is what I'd call the "coupon" variety- $12k/year, $15k/year, $18k/year kinda stuff. For example, he got the highest scholarship at UVM - The Presidential at $20K year - but even with that it still costs almost $40K/year. We were trying to bring costs down to UMD in-state, and none of the schools offered enough to do it.


Right, that's why the sentence prior to your bolding was "Instate will be hard to beat though." But maybe close enough for some budgets.

And congrats because UMD is great - as good or better than UVM, although I love that school also.


You lost all credibility there.


I am the poster who wrote that UMD was "as good or better than UVM", and while I do not believe you can universally or quantifiably rank one of them over another without debate, I was using a different technique, one called "not being an a**hole". It's great. You should try it.

But if I wanted to make that case quantifiably, I'd point out that UMD's ACT cohort is 2 points higher than UVM's at both the 25th and 75th percentiles.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid

My kid had a 3.85 unweighted and a 33 ACT (so I guess roughly equivalent to OP's kid's SAT score). He applied to a lot of public and private schools in the 40-100 range, including some on your list, and got merit aid at all except Lehigh- the problem is that much of the merit aid at these schools is what I'd call the "coupon" variety- $12k/year, $15k/year, $18k/year kinda stuff. For example, he got the highest scholarship at UVM - The Presidential at $20K year - but even with that it still costs almost $40K/year. We were trying to bring costs down to UMD in-state, and none of the schools offered enough to do it.


Right, that's why the sentence prior to your bolding was "Instate will be hard to beat though." But maybe close enough for some budgets.

And congrats because UMD is great - as good or better than UVM, although I love that school also.


You lost all credibility there.


I am the poster who wrote that UMD was "as good or better than UVM", and while I do not believe you can universally or quantifiably rank one of them over another without debate, I was using a different technique, one called "not being an a**hole". It's great. You should try it.

But if I wanted to make that case quantifiably, I'd point out that UMD's ACT cohort is 2 points higher than UVM's at both the 25th and 75th percentiles.


Calling names no good. Don't be an a$$hole.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid

My kid had a 3.85 unweighted and a 33 ACT (so I guess roughly equivalent to OP's kid's SAT score). He applied to a lot of public and private schools in the 40-100 range, including some on your list, and got merit aid at all except Lehigh- the problem is that much of the merit aid at these schools is what I'd call the "coupon" variety- $12k/year, $15k/year, $18k/year kinda stuff. For example, he got the highest scholarship at UVM - The Presidential at $20K year - but even with that it still costs almost $40K/year. We were trying to bring costs down to UMD in-state, and none of the schools offered enough to do it.


Right, that's why the sentence prior to your bolding was "Instate will be hard to beat though." But maybe close enough for some budgets.

And congrats because UMD is great - as good or better than UVM, although I love that school also.


You lost all credibility there.


I am the poster who wrote that UMD was "as good or better than UVM", and while I do not believe you can universally or quantifiably rank one of them over another without debate, I was using a different technique, one called "not being an a**hole". It's great. You should try it.

But if I wanted to make that case quantifiably, I'd point out that UMD's ACT cohort is 2 points higher than UVM's at both the 25th and 75th percentiles.


Calling names no good. Don't be an a$$hole.


Was just responding in kind. And referring to myself.
Anonymous
A neighbor got a full ride from Alabama with similar stats.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Possible merit aid (don’t count on it) at the Univ of Vermont, Temple, Pitt, or others in that approximate tier. Would likely be admitted to the Univ of Wisconsin, Univ of Washington, Boulder. The top tier state schools (Michigan, UCLA, UVA, etc.) would definitely be reaches, but it doesn’t hurt to try.


Nope, not Wisconsin with those numbers. Sorry.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid

My kid had a 3.85 unweighted and a 33 ACT (so I guess roughly equivalent to OP's kid's SAT score). He applied to a lot of public and private schools in the 40-100 range, including some on your list, and got merit aid at all except Lehigh- the problem is that much of the merit aid at these schools is what I'd call the "coupon" variety- $12k/year, $15k/year, $18k/year kinda stuff. For example, he got the highest scholarship at UVM - The Presidential at $20K year - but even with that it still costs almost $40K/year. We were trying to bring costs down to UMD in-state, and none of the schools offered enough to do it.


Right, that's why the sentence prior to your bolding was "Instate will be hard to beat though." But maybe close enough for some budgets.

And congrats because UMD is great - as good or better than UVM, although I love that school also.


You lost all credibility there.

Np. Huh? why would she lose credibility? I have no skin in the game - I have no affiliation at all with UMD - but it's a better school by pretty much every single objective measure, as well as subjective rankings like US news and the WS rankings.


Anybody who thinks UMD and UVM are equivalent is an idiot. UMD is light years ahead.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not very strong stats. Merit aid, if any, won’t be much.


Don't listen to this. 1480 is nearly 99th percentile, and with 8APs the unweighted GPA is not bad, especially if the rest of the schedule is rigorous.

Apply to lots of large schools and see what you get. Instate will be hard to beat though. Try Syracuse, UVM, Marquette, Pitt, UIUC, UConn, Mich State... really deciding where not to apply will be hard.

try this list too

https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-merit-aid

My kid had a 3.85 unweighted and a 33 ACT (so I guess roughly equivalent to OP's kid's SAT score). He applied to a lot of public and private schools in the 40-100 range, including some on your list, and got merit aid at all except Lehigh- the problem is that much of the merit aid at these schools is what I'd call the "coupon" variety- $12k/year, $15k/year, $18k/year kinda stuff. For example, he got the highest scholarship at UVM - The Presidential at $20K year - but even with that it still costs almost $40K/year. We were trying to bring costs down to UMD in-state, and none of the schools offered enough to do it.


Right, that's why the sentence prior to your bolding was "Instate will be hard to beat though." But maybe close enough for some budgets.

And congrats because UMD is great - as good or better than UVM, although I love that school also.


You lost all credibility there.

Np. Huh? why would she lose credibility? I have no skin in the game - I have no affiliation at all with UMD - but it's a better school by pretty much every single objective measure, as well as subjective rankings like US news and the WS rankings.


Anybody who thinks UMD and UVM are equivalent is an idiot. UMD is light years ahead.


If you went there, they didn't teach you reading comprehension.

Since nobody said that.
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