Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh, OP, colleges have to pay professors, physical plant, insurance, and thousands of other costs. Unless there is money from tuition, how do you expect these institutions to function?
And our in-state schools look for out of state students for increased out of state tuition.
Then maybe they should accept more. Our instate schools cost more than many OOS schools. It's crazy.
UVA?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t even believe the truly need-blind schools actually are and I say that as someone who did admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only a very few colleges are totally need blind...H, Y, P maybe. You have to be very well funded.
U.S. institutions that are need-blind and meet full demonstrated need for both U.S. and international students
There are currently only seven U.S. higher education institutions that are need-blind towards all applicants. These institutions meet full demonstrated need for all applicants, including international students.[2] These are:
Amherst College[3]
Bowdoin College[4]
Dartmouth College[5]
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology[6]
Princeton University[7]
Yale University[8]
Where does Bowdoin College get the money?
Bowdoin has like a $2B endowment.
Here's some of their notable alumni in business - lots of $$ here:
George Mitchell 1954, chairman of the Walt Disney Corporation (2004–06)
Leon Gorman 1956, president (1967–2001) and chairman (2001–present) of L. L. Bean
Donald M. Zuckert 1956, chairman and CEO of Ted Bates Worldwide, Inc.
David A. Olsen 1959, CEO of Johnson & Higgins (1990–97); vice chairman of Marsh & McLennan (1997) and then board member (1997–present)
Kenneth Chenault 1973, president (1997–2001) and CEO (2001–present) of American Express; the first African-American CEO of a Fortune 500 company
Sheldon M. Stone 1974, Oaktree Capital Management founder and partner[15]
Stanley Druckenmiller 1975, billionaire financier and philanthropist; former business associate of George Soros
Robert F. White 1977, founding member of Bain Capital
John Studzinski 1978, American-British investment banker and philanthropist and CBE
James "Jes" Staley 1979, former head of investment banking at JPMorgan Chase
Reed Hastings 1983, founder (1997) and CEO (1997–present) of Netflix
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Need-blind_admission
Where does Bowdoin College get the money?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only a very few colleges are totally need blind...H, Y, P maybe. You have to be very well funded.
U.S. institutions that are need-blind and meet full demonstrated need for both U.S. and international students
There are currently only seven U.S. higher education institutions that are need-blind towards all applicants. These institutions meet full demonstrated need for all applicants, including international students.[2] These are:
Amherst College[3]
Bowdoin College[4]
Dartmouth College[5]
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology[6]
Princeton University[7]
Yale University[8]
Where does Bowdoin College get the money?
Here's some of their notable alumni in business - lots of $$ here:
George Mitchell 1954, chairman of the Walt Disney Corporation (2004–06)
Leon Gorman 1956, president (1967–2001) and chairman (2001–present) of L. L. Bean
Donald M. Zuckert 1956, chairman and CEO of Ted Bates Worldwide, Inc.
David A. Olsen 1959, CEO of Johnson & Higgins (1990–97); vice chairman of Marsh & McLennan (1997) and then board member (1997–present)
Kenneth Chenault 1973, president (1997–2001) and CEO (2001–present) of American Express; the first African-American CEO of a Fortune 500 company
Sheldon M. Stone 1974, Oaktree Capital Management founder and partner[15]
Stanley Druckenmiller 1975, billionaire financier and philanthropist; former business associate of George Soros
Robert F. White 1977, founding member of Bain Capital
John Studzinski 1978, American-British investment banker and philanthropist and CBE
James "Jes" Staley 1979, former head of investment banking at JPMorgan Chase
Reed Hastings 1983, founder (1997) and CEO (1997–present) of Netflix
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Need-blind_admission
Where does Bowdoin College get the money?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only a very few colleges are totally need blind...H, Y, P maybe. You have to be very well funded.
U.S. institutions that are need-blind and meet full demonstrated need for both U.S. and international students
There are currently only seven U.S. higher education institutions that are need-blind towards all applicants. These institutions meet full demonstrated need for all applicants, including international students.[2] These are:
Amherst College[3]
Bowdoin College[4]
Dartmouth College[5]
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology[6]
Princeton University[7]
Yale University[8]
Where does Bowdoin College get the money?
Here's some of their notable alumni in business - lots of $$ here:
George Mitchell 1954, chairman of the Walt Disney Corporation (2004–06)
Leon Gorman 1956, president (1967–2001) and chairman (2001–present) of L. L. Bean
Donald M. Zuckert 1956, chairman and CEO of Ted Bates Worldwide, Inc.
David A. Olsen 1959, CEO of Johnson & Higgins (1990–97); vice chairman of Marsh & McLennan (1997) and then board member (1997–present)
Kenneth Chenault 1973, president (1997–2001) and CEO (2001–present) of American Express; the first African-American CEO of a Fortune 500 company
Sheldon M. Stone 1974, Oaktree Capital Management founder and partner[15]
Stanley Druckenmiller 1975, billionaire financier and philanthropist; former business associate of George Soros
Robert F. White 1977, founding member of Bain Capital
John Studzinski 1978, American-British investment banker and philanthropist and CBE
James "Jes" Staley 1979, former head of investment banking at JPMorgan Chase
Reed Hastings 1983, founder (1997) and CEO (1997–present) of Netflix
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Need-blind_admission
Where does Bowdoin College get the money?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh, OP, colleges have to pay professors, physical plant, insurance, and thousands of other costs. Unless there is money from tuition, how do you expect these institutions to function?
And our in-state schools look for out of state students for increased out of state tuition.
Then maybe they should accept more. Our instate schools cost more than many OOS schools. It's crazy.
UVA?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only a very few colleges are totally need blind...H, Y, P maybe. You have to be very well funded.
U.S. institutions that are need-blind and meet full demonstrated need for both U.S. and international students
There are currently only seven U.S. higher education institutions that are need-blind towards all applicants. These institutions meet full demonstrated need for all applicants, including international students.[2] These are:
Amherst College[3]
Bowdoin College[4]
Dartmouth College[5]
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology[6]
Princeton University[7]
Yale University[8]
Where does Bowdoin College get the money?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Need-blind_admission
Where does Bowdoin College get the money?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only a very few colleges are totally need blind...H, Y, P maybe. You have to be very well funded.
U.S. institutions that are need-blind and meet full demonstrated need for both U.S. and international students
There are currently only seven U.S. higher education institutions that are need-blind towards all applicants. These institutions meet full demonstrated need for all applicants, including international students.[2] These are:
Amherst College[3]
Bowdoin College[4]
Dartmouth College[5]
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology[6]
Princeton University[7]
Yale University[8]
Where does Bowdoin College get the money?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Need-blind_admission
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only a very few colleges are totally need blind...H, Y, P maybe. You have to be very well funded.
U.S. institutions that are need-blind and meet full demonstrated need for both U.S. and international students
There are currently only seven U.S. higher education institutions that are need-blind towards all applicants. These institutions meet full demonstrated need for all applicants, including international students.[2] These are:
Amherst College[3]
Bowdoin College[4]
Dartmouth College[5]
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology[6]
Princeton University[7]
Yale University[8]
Where does Bowdoin College get the money?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Need-blind_admission
Anonymous wrote:"will"??? this has been standard practice for years
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only a very few colleges are totally need blind...H, Y, P maybe. You have to be very well funded.
U.S. institutions that are need-blind and meet full demonstrated need for both U.S. and international students
There are currently only seven U.S. higher education institutions that are need-blind towards all applicants. These institutions meet full demonstrated need for all applicants, including international students.[2] These are:
Amherst College[3]
Bowdoin College[4]
Dartmouth College[5]
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology[6]
Princeton University[7]
Yale University[8]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Need-blind_admission
Anonymous wrote:Only a very few colleges are totally need blind...H, Y, P maybe. You have to be very well funded.