Anonymous wrote:My 4.0 uw 36 ACT 5s on all AP exams this year got accepted to an Ivy, top SLAC, 2 T10s and 3 T20s...
not a SINGLE one offered any merit aid (no matter what their website said). We don't qualify for any need-based FA.
He did write emails to a few schools after acceptance, basically said nicely: your are SOL.
Full-freight $90k/year.
I find you have to go lower, lower---he was offered $25k year for 5 years from a T60 school. And he got into all top in-state schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's possible to get a full ride for merit, but not at a 90k/year private school. I went to school for free in the early 2000s at a giant state flagship because they had a program designed to lure in National Merit Scholars. This was tuition, room, board, plus ~$3k/semester in spending money. I'm not 100% sure, but I believe the University of Alabama is offering the same or a similar deal now. That's the kind of school where you can get a full, need-blind merit scholarship, not Yale.
I don't think that's quite true. There are expensive private schools (not Yale, but a few notches down) that do offer full tuition or even more than full tuition merit scholarships.
For example, here's one for U of Rochester: https://admissions.rochester.edu/handler-scholarship/.
Similarly, here's the full tuition scholarship for USC:https://dornsifeadmission.usc.edu/financial-aid
Just do a search and see what you find.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can afford college and expect a full ride?
There’s a big gap between not qualifying for need-based aid and being able to afford a 90K a year private university.
Right!
Someone who identifies as UMC has a very large income and choose not to save. OP is not asking for some help, they are asking for a full ride.
Anonymous wrote:It's possible to get a full ride for merit, but not at a 90k/year private school. I went to school for free in the early 2000s at a giant state flagship because they had a program designed to lure in National Merit Scholars. This was tuition, room, board, plus ~$3k/semester in spending money. I'm not 100% sure, but I believe the University of Alabama is offering the same or a similar deal now. That's the kind of school where you can get a full, need-blind merit scholarship, not Yale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can afford college and expect a full ride?
There’s a big gap between not qualifying for need-based aid and being able to afford a 90K a year private university.
Clearly the school things they can afford it. Or, your kid goes to a state or cheaper school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can afford college and expect a full ride?
There’s a big gap between not qualifying for need-based aid and being able to afford a 90K a year private university.
Right!
Anonymous wrote:It's possible to get a full ride for merit, but not at a 90k/year private school. I went to school for free in the early 2000s at a giant state flagship because they had a program designed to lure in National Merit Scholars. This was tuition, room, board, plus ~$3k/semester in spending money. I'm not 100% sure, but I believe the University of Alabama is offering the same or a similar deal now. That's the kind of school where you can get a full, need-blind merit scholarship, not Yale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can afford college and expect a full ride?
There’s a big gap between not qualifying for need-based aid and being able to afford a 90K a year private university.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can afford college and expect a full ride?
There’s a big gap between not qualifying for need-based aid and being able to afford a 90K a year private university.