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College and University Discussion
Reply to "MD In-state options beyond College Park "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Our DD did not get into UMD this year. She did not like the feel of UMBC when she visitied. She is okay with Towson, it was better than I expected with lots of new construction. Salisbury was a definite no and she would not even visit Frostburg. [b]She has received merit aid from several OOS schools that brings the cost down close to in-state, including places like Miami-Ohio and Alabama.[/b][/quote] [b]Not too many OOS flagships are going to come close to or under UMD’s instate cost of $23,000. [/b]As an example, my DS, who was accepted at UMD this year, got $8000 in merit aid at Pitt but the total OOS cost is still $40,000. He also got $14000 in merit aid at UDel but the total OOS cost is $37,000. Miami-Ohio is $49,000 OOS. To get close to UMD’s cost, a student would have to receive $26,000 in merit aid. Alabama is $43,000 OOS so would require $20,000 in merit aid. Did your DC really receive that much aid? [/quote] UMD costs about $27,000/year all-in, not $23,000. My DC got $20K from Pitt, taking the cost to about $24,000. Less than UMD-CP for us. At Miami/Ohio, a student with ACT: 33+/SAT: 1450+ and GPA 3.50+ will get half to full tuition, which would equate to between $15-$30K merit for OOS. That could take the cost to about what UMD-CP would cost, depending on the size of the award.[/quote] That maybe but if your DC has one bad semester (which most kids do), you can kiss that money goodbye.[/quote] A kid who qualifies for the money to begin with is unlikely to have a bad semester that takes the GPA below e.g. 3.0, which is often what is required to maintain the merit scholarship. Many [b]schools give the student some leeway in any case.[/quote][/b] How does it work? 2.95 is okay when 3.0 is required? How about 2.94? Where does it stop and how do you apply fairly??[/quote] Each school has its own standards, so you need to check them and determine what is realistic. My DC has a large ($32K/year) merit scholarship from a LAC. If DC's GPA drops below 3.0, DC has a semester to get it back up. If that doesn't happen, the scholarship is reduced by $5K. Every school has its own approach.[/quote] It’s on school’s website? I have never seen anything like that written.[/quote] Not the previous poster but my child had an offer from ASU and it was clearly written out for you. https://students.asu.edu/scholarships/renewal Go to the bottom of the page for academic support, maintenance plan, and appeals. Every school has this, even if it isn’t listed online. It will be with your merit package or you ask FA to email you a copy. [/quote]
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