NOPE |
Roughly 60/40 https://www.wm.edu/admission/undergraduateadmission/facts-figures/class-profile/?fbclid=IwAR0dYzWk0clec9IXsPlUPS9kY3AF9p9clUeP006hYfoYE0mRhgrGuViRrcE |
Use the SCHEV link that's been discussed for 2+ pages. |
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Monroe Scholars program is the honors program at W&M. It is NOT a big fat scholarship.
The only money is a small grant for a research project one summer. That’s it for Monroe $. |
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One thing you have to remember about UVA is the huge tuition difference depending on the school your student is in. I don’t know if that’s the same for W&M. My DS had to take a loan this year because he’s in the Batten school now and it’s about a $9k increase per year over the college of arts and sciences. His EFC is $40k and that is also his cost of attendance.
Also UVA is much larger than W&M so not sure it’s even worth comparing the total debt in that way. They take less in state students and it’s a small liberal arts type college in a public school body. |
Oh, shoot you are right; this is what I get for jumping the gun. They only get a research stipend and other non-monetary perks. Seems similar to UVA in those perks.
W&M scholarship though does cover it, unless my reading skills have totally abandoned me. |
You are right. I meant SAT. W&M is lower both both the median and significantly so at the 25th percentile |
W&M has lower SATs at the 50th and 25th percentile |
I do not see it. I see in the research reports that they have similar loan amounts. |
DP. And you wonder why UVA boosters and mocked and reviled. Get over yourself. |
Monroe at W&M is similar to Echols/Rodman at UVA and provides flexibility on requirements and a research stipend, but not tuition and is based on merit. 1693 Scholars at W&M are similar to Jefferson Scholars at UVA and are also based on merit. It funds tuition and some other things. Both are funded by and managed by foundations external to the schools. These are relatively limited in number, probably more so for 1693 program as it is more recent. (W&L has the biggest merit scholarship program in the state on a percentage of class basis, with at least 10% of the incoming class receiving tuition and room and board through the Johnson Scholars program.) The Common Data Sets contain a line that specifies the number of students without financial need who were awarded non-need based scholarships (excluding athletic awards). The number for W&M for all undergraduates was 382 and for UVA was 1108. UVA has about 2.7X as many undergraduates, so the UVA merit number is slightly higher on a proportional basis. I suspect the PP who quoted a big disparity in student debt didn't have the right numbers. I think they are similar. Merit aid is not a significant factor. Many who get merit would not have gotten financial aid. |
Are you really this insecure? |
These things are all funded differently. They don't really compete like that. Construction for most projects is either funded through the state capital budget or through bonds. In the case of new dorms, the bonds are revenue bonds backed by the room and board revenue. (William and Mary's new dorms are being built with a public-private partnership with a developer, an approach that is increasingly used in higher education). Merit scholarships are funded by external private foundations. Financial aid is funded by general revenue (including tuition), private philanthropy, and state and federal sources. |
Ah, thank you for the clarification. |
Google says UVA 32% OOS. WM is 38%. So if anything the WM loan average should be larger. |