You don't know that - you are just speculating. At Ohio Wesleyan, e.g., 99% of students receive merit scholarships and/or need-based aid. The Common Data Set for each school tells you what percentage of students receive merit scholarships. |
Highly unlikely |
| University of South Carolina |
You are clueless if you actually think this. |
Again, reading comprehension people. I said "significant" merit aid. A couple thousand maybe -- maybe. Not enough to bring costs below State U. |
You are stubbornly. No one I know pays more than $25k/yr for college and everyone’s kids go to to liberal arts colleges. |
Then you either don't know a lot of people or you do know a lot of people and their kids all go to terrible colleges. Also, who are all these people who tell you what kind of aid they get? I have no idea what anybody I've ever known has paid for their kids' college education beyond my immediate family. Weirdo. |
| OP said cost isn't a factor, so I don't know why you two are bickering about this. |
DP: In my friend group of MC/UMC people, when kids were going through college searches we regularly would talk about how much different schools would cost and then when we were paying for it we talked about how much it DID cost. Just like we talked about how much daycare cost back when they were little. These weren't close friends--often just other parents of our kids' teams, orchestras etc. Helps you sort through the options and find out which schools offer good aid. |
|
Babson
Union College U of Rochester Those might be a stretch tho. Being full-pay will really help the next few years as university balance sheets recover from COVID. |
Nah |
I'd also add Trinity in CT. So many kids from big $$$ families attend and lots of students do well in Northeastern finance and business circles. It's a school with very strong connections to the NYC business community. |
| Both of my kids got into several of their "reach" schools where their grades and test scores were a good bit below the average and a couple were less than the 25%. They didn't have any unusual extras - they played sports, did a few activities but nothing out of the ordinary. Lesson learned in my household is that they often get into the schools they don't think they'll be accepted to, so don't get too hung up on the number or the negative posters on here. |
| I second the advice from a PP to look at both Bryant and Babson. If Catholic is OK, I suggest checking out Marist and Merrimack. |
| OOPS!! I meant Bryant and Bentley. |