| In-state UVA or W&M, sorry that wasn’t clear |
No problem. No doubt UVA in state would be ideal! |
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In the beginning you mentioned probable National Merit Semifinalist, Is she a NM semifinalist now as the list is announced ?
If yes, there are tonnes of schools which offer merit scholarships. there is a list for semifinalists too https://www.collegekickstart.com/blog/item/colleges-with-great-scholarships-for-national-merit-finalists |
| University of Rochester gives decent merit but not enough to make the school comparable with in-state tuition. |
OP here, yes DS was named a NMSF and plans on designating Northeastern. Not particularly interested in any other schools that offer substantial merit aid to NMF. |
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Binghamton in NY which is a great SUNY school
- best in NY is looking to attract more students outside the CT, NY and NJ area. My daughter with similar stats offered her in state tuition rate all four years. Yes the just offer in state tuition to really smart out of state students |
| Btw in state tuition at Binghamton in $7,100 a year |
Because umpteen kids with stats just like your kid’s or better are applying. |
| Susquehanna is rising in popularity due to merit scholarships. |
“Umpteen” kids? OPs kid with SAT of 1550 + has great stats. Just for some perspective 1520+ is in the 99th percentile For most top ten schools the 75th percentile of admitted students got 1570+ so OPs kid is probably among the top 10000 sat takers in the country You do need more than that to get merit aid at UMD (especially BK) but they would definitely be in the running Getting the President’s scholarship would be much more likely. OP my kid was in a similar situation a couple of years ago. Wanted to stay in the mid Atlantic/East coast and was open to Slacs. Interested in stem. Got a few merit aid packages (Pitt, Brandeis,William and Mary and a couple of others) but we learned that it is very difficult to get merit aid from a top 30 school. Once you are looking at the next tier of schools (30-60) it is more likely but UMD is still significantly likely to be much cheaper especially if UMD gives even a small scholarship. So then you have to decide whether it is worth spending an extra $20-30k per year for a school that might not offer a much better education. If your child would definitely be better off in a smaller lac it might be worth paying extra but if they don’t mind going to a bigger university you can’t beat UMD ito value for money especially for STEM. So far, all but one of my child’s classes have been taught by a full-time professor and he has liked his classes. Most of his classes have been small. The campus is actually very nice. I think my child would have preferred a smaller university but no complaints about the quality of his education. |
Goodness. |
| Bump |
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So --- my post got closed and referred here. My interest is more in the top schools. I see a few like Emory, WashU, Tulane, W&M (we are out of state) listed here. SLAC's listed broadly but would like specifics...and are there others for a very high stats kid willing to set an Ivy or top SLAC aside.
Original Post "What are the top schools that offer merit aid? Currently have a junior who has stats to have a chance at top schools and has funds to be full pay. Considering some Ivys, top SLACs, and others outside top 20 on a stats perspective. But with long term picture in mind, I'd like to have DS also consider schools that could potentially get merit aid and then have a choice in the end among acceptances so that some include the option to take a merit package vs a full pay and save the 529 funds for graduate school." |
| Neighbor’s kid got some merit aid form Carnegie Mellon, don’t know the details |
If you are paying attention to this board generally, you will know that the top schools only take the top kids (like yours) but since there are more of those kids than seats every year, they do not have to offer significant merit aid to get them. The next tier of schools want those same kids, but understand that to get them, they will have to compete by offering generous scholarships. So, what you are seeking may be a bit of a unicorn. Most families in your position have to choose between a very impressive sounding school with a hefty bill OR a very respectable school that will offers their child an excellent education, at a enviable price. Both appealing choices but only you can weigh the value of each. |