Because the merit aid is what makes it more desirable than SUNY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Alabama publishes merit guidelines. Just Google “University of Alabama out of state merit”
Omg no OP
SUNY school not Alabama. No one in their right mind chooses a school in Alabama over SUNY.
LOL. So many kids not in their right minds to choose a warm, cheap, beautiful school with a large honors program, awesome honors dorms, and SEC football. What insanity.
+1 there is a reason NY kids flock to southern flagships
If so many are going to AL why do they need to offer so much merit aid to not top tier students to get them to go there?
Which cost less after scholarships than Bama OOS for the same stats?Anonymous wrote:Generally the publics don’t offer a lot.
I know you are proud of your kid but the sooner you realize he’s a dime a dozen in the application pool the easier it will be to manage your expectations
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would suggest studying hard for the PSAT. So many scholarships and a lot of merit is determined by the PSAT score. Most people seem to be unaware of all the possibilities that are unlocked by a high PSAT score. It's like a life hack for informed families. Do well on the PSAT and money and opportunities follow.
Can you give examples outside of National Merit Scholarship?
DP. You are asking specifically about PSAT? The only other scholarships where PSAT is relevant are College Board's National Recognition Programs for certain minority groups and rural high school students https://bigfuture.collegeboard.org/communities-events/national-recognition-programs
For minority groups in particular, listing the award in the honors section of the application, e.g., National African American Recognition Program, can signal to colleges the applicant's race/ethnicity without having to mention it in an essay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Alabama publishes merit guidelines. Just Google “University of Alabama out of state merit”
Omg no OP
SUNY school not Alabama. No one in their right mind chooses a school in Alabama over SUNY.
LOL. So many kids not in their right minds to choose a warm, cheap, beautiful school with a large honors program, awesome honors dorms, and SEC football. What insanity.
+1 there is a reason NY kids flock to southern flagships
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would suggest studying hard for the PSAT. So many scholarships and a lot of merit is determined by the PSAT score. Most people seem to be unaware of all the possibilities that are unlocked by a high PSAT score. It's like a life hack for informed families. Do well on the PSAT and money and opportunities follow.
Can you give examples outside of National Merit Scholarship?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would suggest studying hard for the PSAT. So many scholarships and a lot of merit is determined by the PSAT score. Most people seem to be unaware of all the possibilities that are unlocked by a high PSAT score. It's like a life hack for informed families. Do well on the PSAT and money and opportunities follow.
Can you give examples outside of National Merit Scholarship?
DP. You are asking specifically about PSAT? The only other scholarships where PSAT is relevant are College Board's National Recognition Programs for certain minority groups and rural high school students https://bigfuture.collegeboard.org/communities-events/national-recognition-programs
For minority groups in particular, listing the award in the honors section of the application, e.g., National African American Recognition Program, can signal to colleges the applicant's race/ethnicity without having to mention it in an essay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would suggest studying hard for the PSAT. So many scholarships and a lot of merit is determined by the PSAT score. Most people seem to be unaware of all the possibilities that are unlocked by a high PSAT score. It's like a life hack for informed families. Do well on the PSAT and money and opportunities follow.
Can you give examples outside of National Merit Scholarship?
Anonymous wrote:Would suggest studying hard for the PSAT. So many scholarships and a lot of merit is determined by the PSAT score. Most people seem to be unaware of all the possibilities that are unlocked by a high PSAT score. It's like a life hack for informed families. Do well on the PSAT and money and opportunities follow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Alabama publishes merit guidelines. Just Google “University of Alabama out of state merit”
Omg no OP
SUNY school not Alabama. No one in their right mind chooses a school in Alabama over SUNY.
LOL. So many kids not in their right minds to choose a warm, cheap, beautiful school with a large honors program, awesome honors dorms, and SEC football. What insanity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University of Alabama publishes merit guidelines. Just Google “University of Alabama out of state merit”
Omg no OP
SUNY school not Alabama. No one in their right mind chooses a school in Alabama over SUNY.