Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid is going to be a senior. 4.0W/3.6UW with all honors in core classes all 4y, 1AP/5 IB/1 DE + lettered in a varsity sport (wasn't offered COVID year) + National Honors Society. But he BOMBED the SAT (under 1100 with a prep class...yes, we can talk grade inflation...but also ADHD and being a poor test taker.) Clearly he will be going TO and isn't applying to top schools (looking at Towson, Temple, GMU) but wasn't sure how being test optional affected merit aid. Any insight? We need all the merit he can get since we won't qualify for financial aid.
Have your son try the ACT. With extra time, it is a much easier test to master than the SAT. My ADHD kid got a 34.
OP - my DS had the same GPA and no AP classes, some honors, same test scores so went TO.
He was offered merit aid at almost every school at which he was accepted - varying in degrees - and he is now a rising freshman at Elon, where he got merit aid. But he also got merit aid at Miami of Ohio, University of Tampa, High Point, and WVU. He was rejected from 2 reach schools, unsurprisingly, but was accepted everywhere else.
My TO 4.2 kid with 6 APs and 4-year sport, NHS, and a STEM focus received zero merit at Elon.
Anonymous wrote:Disagree strongly with the Temple suggestion, but check out St. Joe's. It's a nice school that is quite generous with merit aid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid is going to be a senior. 4.0W/3.6UW with all honors in core classes all 4y, 1AP/5 IB/1 DE + lettered in a varsity sport (wasn't offered COVID year) + National Honors Society. But he BOMBED the SAT (under 1100 with a prep class...yes, we can talk grade inflation...but also ADHD and being a poor test taker.) Clearly he will be going TO and isn't applying to top schools (looking at Towson, Temple, GMU) but wasn't sure how being test optional affected merit aid. Any insight? We need all the merit he can get since we won't qualify for financial aid.
Have your son try the ACT. With extra time, it is a much easier test to master than the SAT. My ADHD kid got a 34.
OP - my DS had the same GPA and no AP classes, some honors, same test scores so went TO.
He was offered merit aid at almost every school at which he was accepted - varying in degrees - and he is now a rising freshman at Elon, where he got merit aid. But he also got merit aid at Miami of Ohio, University of Tampa, High Point, and WVU. He was rejected from 2 reach schools, unsurprisingly, but was accepted everywhere else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think expecting test optional will result in merit aid is a little like expecting a medal for turning up.
And yet there are schools that advertise automatic merit discounts for certain GPAs, if you apply test optional. Do you think those schools are lying?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think expecting test optional will result in merit aid is a little like expecting a medal for turning up.
And yet there are schools that advertise automatic merit discounts for certain GPAs, if you apply test optional. Do you think those schools are lying?
Anonymous wrote:I think expecting test optional will result in merit aid is a little like expecting a medal for turning up.
Anonymous wrote:My DD went TO and got $15000/yr from CU Boulder
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Merit” aid means just that. Under an 1100 doesn’t cut it, especially when the grades, while good, aren’t outstanding. Honestly why do you think a good college should give him “merit” aid to attend?
This is worse than uncharitable, it’s untrue. Many colleges will give merit for this GPA, even test optional.
+1
Some kids just do not test well---I have one. 30+ hours of test prep and they were at .....drumroll....the exact same score where they started (~1250). ADHD and anxiety are often an issue with standardized testing. Kid has graduated college, employed for 2+ years with the top raise each year. I'd call that successful. Kid graduate college with a 3.4+ and it was "only that low" because of first year premed attempt that failed miserably and killed the gpa. If they had started in their actual major, they would've been over a 3.6.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid is going to be a senior. 4.0W/3.6UW with all honors in core classes all 4y, 1AP/5 IB/1 DE + lettered in a varsity sport (wasn't offered COVID year) + National Honors Society. But he BOMBED the SAT (under 1100 with a prep class...yes, we can talk grade inflation...but also ADHD and being a poor test taker.) Clearly he will be going TO and isn't applying to top schools (looking at Towson, Temple, GMU) but wasn't sure how being test optional affected merit aid. Any insight? We need all the merit he can get since we won't qualify for financial aid.
Have your son try the ACT. With extra time, it is a much easier test to master than the SAT. My ADHD kid got a 34.
OP - my DS had the same GPA and no AP classes, some honors, same test scores so went TO.
He was offered merit aid at almost every school at which he was accepted - varying in degrees - and he is now a rising freshman at Elon, where he got merit aid. But he also got merit aid at Miami of Ohio, University of Tampa, High Point, and WVU. He was rejected from 2 reach schools, unsurprisingly, but was accepted everywhere else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid is going to be a senior. 4.0W/3.6UW with all honors in core classes all 4y, 1AP/5 IB/1 DE + lettered in a varsity sport (wasn't offered COVID year) + National Honors Society. But he BOMBED the SAT (under 1100 with a prep class...yes, we can talk grade inflation...but also ADHD and being a poor test taker.) Clearly he will be going TO and isn't applying to top schools (looking at Towson, Temple, GMU) but wasn't sure how being test optional affected merit aid. Any insight? We need all the merit he can get since we won't qualify for financial aid.
Have your son try the ACT. With extra time, it is a much easier test to master than the SAT. My ADHD kid got a 34.
This is a good advice. Since he is going TO anyway, give it a shot at ACT (and also retake SAT??). What do you got to lose?