Anonymous wrote:We won't qualify for financial aid and I don't want to provide financial info to college, FAFSA or CSS. Am I missing something by ignoring their many "recommendations" that we file these forms? (No chance of merit aid at this school but merit aid is possible at a few other schools where DS has applied). Thanks for any insight.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the PP whose DC got multiple merit aid offers...DC had a 3.5 (unweighted, strong upward trajectory) from a highly competitive private hs, a 32 ACT with perfect english and reading scores, and a very strong package of extracurriculars. In other words, an ideal SLAC candidate. My advice: first of all, check to see which SLACs offer merit aid and which don't (college confidential is all over this). Then see if your DC is in the upper 50 percent, or ideally upper 25 percent, of applicants, based on the common data set info for each school that you can find online. If so, and if the school awards merit aid, DC will likely get an offer...because these schools are eager for strong kids to attend.
Some state schools automatically award merit aid to strong applicants...Alabama and Vermont come to mind. I've heard other Southern state schools are especially generous.
My DC had a specific academic interest and wound up going to a top state school. But the merit offers DC received did influence the process -- when there's a 25k/year price difference between SLACs, you have to wonder if the more expensive (and more prestigious) option is really worth it. In the end, my DC decided not.
Anonymous wrote:Our son just got merit aid from three schools and we didn't fill out a fafsa.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son just got merit aid from three schools and we didn't fill out a fafsa.
Our DC got large scholarships at multiple schools, no financial aid form (this was two years ago). The offers came with the acceptance letters. All were match/safety SLACs, all top 50, name brand schools (at least to the DC crowd). Of course DC went to a school that offered no aid.
Anonymous wrote:I have three kids in three different colleges. One private and two state schools. All three insisted on FAFSA before they awarded scholarships. We knew we wouldn't qualify for any kind of financial aid but we had to do it in order for them to receive their academic and athletic scholarships.
Anonymous wrote:Our son just got merit aid from three schools and we didn't fill out a fafsa.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, many schools require it. And some do not. blah.blah blah.
Hasn't this been established already??
Anonymous wrote:Our son just got merit aid from three schools and we didn't fill out a fafsa.