Anonymous wrote:Juniata
Anonymous wrote:My NOVA kid took the money and ran to UMN, even over more highly ranked schools.
Anonymous wrote:I think this discussion has mostly centered around big state flagships and merit aid, which is great, but as a parent of a kid who wanted a SLAC, I figured I'd add a couple of other ideas from that realm: Macalester, Reed, and Lewis & Clark. All had early November EA deadlines and notified very quickly. Lewis & Clark offered great merit aid to my kid. I became big fans of each of these schools during the application process, although my kid went elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Minnesota.
I think they call it EA, but they issue decisions on a rolling basis. My son applied last Year, in mid October, and was accepted in about 2 weeks. They also gave some nice merit.
We visited, and it is a nice school. Strong for CS. My son seriously considered it, but decided on Pitt.
Great option though!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The University of Iowa has a very fast turnaround. I think my DS was accepted less than a week after he applied in September of last year. And there's a handy calculator you can use to see whether you will be accepted. He didn't choose to go there or the other EA/Rolling schools that accepted him, but it was a huge relief to know he had choices even before the other applications were due.
Here is the calculator in case you're interested: https://www.iowaregents.edu/institutions/higher-education-links/regent-admission-index/rai-calculator
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Minnesota.
I think they call it EA, but they issue decisions on a rolling basis. My son applied last Year, in mid October, and was accepted in about 2 weeks. They also gave some nice merit.
We visited, and it is a nice school. Strong for CS. My son seriously considered it, but decided on Pitt.
Great option though!
Why did he choose Pitt?
A few reasons. I think he preferred Pitt’s urban campus. Minn is in TC, but has a pretty traditional big school campus. That could be a plus but not what my son was looking for. He also prefers Pittsburgh as a city.
I find this response so odd. UMN is a very urban campus in Minneapolis. I would not describe it as a traditional campus at all. It's one of the things I don't like about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Minnesota.
I think they call it EA, but they issue decisions on a rolling basis. My son applied last Year, in mid October, and was accepted in about 2 weeks. They also gave some nice merit.
We visited, and it is a nice school. Strong for CS. My son seriously considered it, but decided on Pitt.
Great option though!
Why did he choose Pitt?
A few reasons. I think he preferred Pitt’s urban campus. Minn is in TC, but has a pretty traditional big school campus. That could be a plus but not what my son was looking for. He also prefers Pittsburgh as a city.
Anonymous wrote:So smart to include a rolling admit school. We visited Univ of MN. They admitted, then gave a scholarship a few weeks later, then honors college. It was a great fall boost. And we know kids who attended and liked, so it was somewhere DC would have been ok going if options were limited.
Anonymous wrote:Minnesota.
I think they call it EA, but they issue decisions on a rolling basis. My son applied last Year, in mid October, and was accepted in about 2 weeks. They also gave some nice merit.
We visited, and it is a nice school. Strong for CS. My son seriously considered it, but decided on Pitt.
Great option though!