| I was thinking Miami of Ohio OP. It's lovely and does do merit aid. Have dd take SAT/ACT Prep course. It will be worth your while to have her score as high as possible. |
|
I agree with PP that Temple is a good option and plan to visit with my sophomore at some point. Temple does offer merit aid for good but not great students.
As you can see, OP, your daughter would be in the ballpark for decent aid: https://admissions.temple.edu/sites/admissions/files/uploads/010-1415_Scholarship-Info_FINAL-ADA_508.pdf |
As a data point, my son got waitlisted at college of Wooster with an unweighted 3.5 and 1920 SAT. But I agree some of the CTCL schools deserve a look. Knox offered DS a lot of merit aid but he didn't like the town. |
My DD was admitted to Wooster last year with an unweighted 3.3 and 2340 SATs. She got $24,000/year in merit aid. Beloit might be an option. OP's DD needs to warm up to the Midwest, as that is where most SLACs that give merit aid are located. |
|
You could try the old "geographic diversity" strategy. That is, identify schools in other parts of the country, typically private and not a name brand, that do not get many applicants from this region and want to improve that to create geographic diversity with the student body.
Using this method, my friend's kid, a decent B+ student, got a VERY generous package from the University of Redlands in California. Like 75% of total cost covered. Now, friend's kid did not end up going there, but I throw the idea out as something to ponder. |
Uh, W&M alum here, with more than a passing knowledge of Mary Washington. I'd say the two schools have some important commonalities, mainly size, architectural style, and location in a historic town. The both are primarily undergraduate focused, though they both have some graduate programs. W&M is far more selective than Mary Washington. |
|
|
Definitely read the book Colleges that Change Lives, and encourage your DD to consider Midwest colleges. If she will expand her geographic focus, she will have many more affordable options. For donut-hole families, there are very few affordable options in New England.
If she is interested in SLACs, consider Goucher, McDaniel, Juniata, Allegheny, Wheaton (MA), Wooster, Kalamazoo, Ohio Wesleyan. Smaller publics with affordable OOS tuition: Mary Washington, SUNY-Geneseo, UNC-Asheville, University of Minnesota-Morris, Truman State, Christopher Newport. Larger publics with affordable OOS tuition: James Madison, any of the SUNYs, UNC-Wilmington, Appalachian State, Ohio University. |
|
A good friend's DC was admitted to U of California, Santa Cruz, and absolutely loves it. A forest-like campus and not far from the ocean. The college has a high admit rate, granola like, and an environment that is most definitely easy on the mind.
Broaden your horizons if you can. The world goes past the mid-atlantic/east coast. |
| Albright and muellenberg in PA |
That's a ridiculous statement. I know kids who have gotten merit aid at all sorts of schools up and down the East Coast. |
|
THIS from 16:52 below! I agree here. OP, your child is not you. There is something out there that will let her shine. Anyone who finds something they like, even basket weaving.
Me, me, me! "Her friends are doing well but she's floundering." "I went to an ivy so this is a struggle for ME." It's not about YOU! Just because YOU went to an Ivy doesn't mean your child is walking in your footsteps and certainly not your clone. Get your hands on Peterson's 4-year college guide. There are hundreds of good schools that can accommodate your daughter. If her head is hanging low and buried in the sand, YOU are partially the blame. Stop mentally beating up on that child and be the beacon of support! And STOP comparing her to her friends. A 'B' is NOT a death sentence! Geez!! |
Ooops, forgot to complete my sentence. Anyone who finds something they like, even basket weaving, will do well and get the A grade. |
| Allegheny College in PA. |
| Bennington and St Mike's in VT may be worth checking out - they may like that your DD is from the mid Atlantic rather than New England. |