Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think OP may be asking about scholarships offered by non-school organizations.
Yes, some kids are successful with these, but they seem pretty random, and since OP said her kid is a junior, I think people were trying to aim her towards focusing first on school-specific financial aid, to make sure OP's kid applies to the right places. It would be hard for OP's kid to cobble together 35K in random scholarships from community organizations, but that's the sort of merit aid some places give. Better to apply to that kind of school, get the 35K in merit aid, and then apply for smaller scholarships that might or might not come through.
You can start trying to rack some of them up early. Usually a few hundred here and a thousand here. Our neighborhood association has one, our pool has one, our local rec sports association has one, our church has a few... Usually they require at least an essay and they aren't very widely publicized so if you know to enter you have a good chance of winning.
Those ones are not enough (availability and amount). Big money comes from the school itself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS is a Junior. Please share any information about different types of Scholarships, and how to achieve them. Thank you in advance.
National Merit Scholarship is one route. Another is to pick colleges where merit scholarships are given and you are out of their league good. Getting scholarships is only difficult if you are going for elite colleges. Easiest scholarships without good stats are need based, if you are eligible.
Anonymous wrote:My DS is a Junior. Please share any information about different types of Scholarships, and how to achieve them. Thank you in advance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think OP may be asking about scholarships offered by non-school organizations.
Yes, some kids are successful with these, but they seem pretty random, and since OP said her kid is a junior, I think people were trying to aim her towards focusing first on school-specific financial aid, to make sure OP's kid applies to the right places. It would be hard for OP's kid to cobble together 35K in random scholarships from community organizations, but that's the sort of merit aid some places give. Better to apply to that kind of school, get the 35K in merit aid, and then apply for smaller scholarships that might or might not come through.
You can start trying to rack some of them up early. Usually a few hundred here and a thousand here. Our neighborhood association has one, our pool has one, our local rec sports association has one, our church has a few... Usually they require at least an essay and they aren't very widely publicized so if you know to enter you have a good chance of winning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think OP may be asking about scholarships offered by non-school organizations.
Yes, some kids are successful with these, but they seem pretty random, and since OP said her kid is a junior, I think people were trying to aim her towards focusing first on school-specific financial aid, to make sure OP's kid applies to the right places. It would be hard for OP's kid to cobble together 35K in random scholarships from community organizations, but that's the sort of merit aid some places give. Better to apply to that kind of school, get the 35K in merit aid, and then apply for smaller scholarships that might or might not come through.
Anonymous wrote:I think OP may be asking about scholarships offered by non-school organizations.
Anonymous wrote:There are lists of schools that give good merit did (often second tier liberal arts schools). You will find them by searching in this forum or Google.