Anonymous wrote:What happens if the school goes virtual. Can you then refuse the ED admission?
Anonymous wrote:Do any schools promise merit aid before applying ED? I’d love for DC to apply ED to a school that does give merit but only if we know it will be awarded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I asked in the other thread if applying ED meant you were agreeing to go to that school, if accepted, without aid.
No. If you can't pay, you can't pay. They can not force you to attend and pay full freight.
But whether or not they offer you money is a different conversation.
If you do not apply for FA and apply ED, it is assumed (and reasonably so) that you will go if you are admitted.
OP, did you not look at the costs before your DC submitted the ED application? How strange.
Anonymous wrote:Do any schools promise merit aid before applying ED? I’d love for DC to apply ED to a school that does give merit but only if we know it will be awarded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you applied binding early decision, did not seek financial aid, and can't afford it, an acceptance will be binding. In addition, other schools will know that you reneged and will not accept you. If you can't afford to attend without aid, you should not be applying early decision, but should ask to be moved to the regular decision pool.
Is this true? I've heard it, but what do they do, put your name on an email blast?
Not true. If you can't afford it, there's no negative for breaking an ED admissions offer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you applied binding early decision, did not seek financial aid, and can't afford it, an acceptance will be binding. In addition, other schools will know that you reneged and will not accept you. If you can't afford to attend without aid, you should not be applying early decision, but should ask to be moved to the regular decision pool.
Is this true? I've heard it, but what do they do, put your name on an email blast?
Anonymous wrote:If you applied binding early decision, did not seek financial aid, and can't afford it, an acceptance will be binding. In addition, other schools will know that you reneged and will not accept you. If you can't afford to attend without aid, you should not be applying early decision, but should ask to be moved to the regular decision pool.
Anonymous wrote:Happened to me 25 years ago -- college promised me (basically) a merit scholarship and then didn't give it to me on my ED acceptance.
I told them sorry, can't do it and got a full ride to a state school. It was on their administration for promising something they didn't deliver.
but you should have known the price before applying ED.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait until they send our merit scholarship letters first before you withdraw.
OK. Thank you.
This will be too late. The merit scholarship notifications typically come with the offer of admission. Once they offer you admission, it will be binding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid applied ED to a top college and the cost is 80K. (And if you are not eligible according to FAFSA. Late in filing CSS.). Will they care to offer you any merit scholarsship at all or you have pretty much sealed your fate with the ED checkbox?
Where does your kid stand in their disclosure of top 25% SATs and GPA? And is the school ranked below 50 if it is a university?
Near top for SAT, GPA, rigor, ECs. No other hook. School is top school for sought after STEM major. University is T30.