Johns Hopkins offers merit scholarships to 20 students each year. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hodson_Trust_Scholarship |
It is a top 20 SLAC. |
And the other PP was pointing one of them out. |
That is good to know! Thanks! |
Ahh, the joys of DCUM. Someone contributes to the topic of the thread and other posters immediately need to doubt, put down and otherwise demonstrate what makes living in this area unbearable at times. |
You are missing the point. Getting a merit scholarship from (Nationally Ranked) top 20 is a completely different ballgame than getting one from top 20 SLAC. PP used "top 20" which implied National Ranking, not SLAC ranking. |
If you're reading DCUM, you won't quality for anything need-based. Sincerely, <$200K HHI in the doughnut hole of need/merit aid |
Not true Sincerely, <$130K HHI and getting $20K/yr |
No, actually you are missing the point. First of all, the poster whose son was awarded the merit aid at Grinnell said top 20 college, which implies a SLAC, not a top 20 "National Ranking," whatever you mean by that and I don't even care. Secondly the fact that you are splitting hairs over what "top 20" means further proves my point about how unbearable people on DCUM/this area can be. |
LOL. You are not any better. You are one of us after all... |
| Top 20 has a certain meaning when you are talking about colleges, right or wrong--Top 20 National (USNWR). Not a biggie, just confusing to use the term when you are talking about generous merit aid which doesn't exist at that level. |
| Both Vanderbilt and WashU are top 20 and give large merit awards. |
Large in $ amount but small number of "big" scholarships. |
USNWR has two national rankings, one for universities and one for LACs. "Top 20" could refer to either of these. Of the USNWR top 20 national universities, only Chicago, Duke, Johns Hopkins, Northwestern, Rice, Notre Dame, Vanderbilt, Wash U, and Emory offer merit aid. Cal-Berkeley offers merit aid, but virtually all of it only to California residents. MIT does *not* offer merit aid. https://sfs.mit.edu/undergraduate-financial-aid/types-of-aid/mit-scholarships Of the USNWR top 20 LACs, only Wellesley, Claremont McKenna, Davidson, Washington and Lee, Smith, and Grinnell offer merit aid. (Note: Some of the top 20 universities/LACs may offer "national merit scholarships" to students who are national merit scholars based on their standardized test scores. These one-time (first year) scholarships are typically $1000-$2000.) |
| While I'm sure there are some exceptions, I also get the feeling after DS applied to some of those schools that the big merit awards are not meant for most UMC children -- probably as it should be. Emory, in particular, is pretty clear that in order to remain need blind, they admit much of their class ED, have increased international enrollment, and very "strategically award merit aid." |