Anonymous wrote:Why my daughter got accepted to Pitt and went to Delaware. The aid at Pitt for OOS is bad
Anonymous wrote:Do you have to keep checking the portal for admissions decisions and merit aid or do they send an email?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dmv child just received an offer of $80k total (so $20k per year). So they can be quite generous.
What do they say is the remaining annual cost you need to cover? Is that less than UVA in state ?
Anonymous wrote:My dmv child just received an offer of $80k total (so $20k per year). So they can be quite generous.
Anonymous wrote:Pitt used to be known for having fairly generous merit aid. About 4 or 5 years ago, they moved away from that and started funneling money toward need based aid instead. I wouldn’t count on merit unless your kid applies early and is at the top of the applicant pool, and even then awards have been few and for smaller amounts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Class of 24, received $5K/yr for Dietrich, matriculated elsewhere.
Found an old webpage from before the pandemic. Suggests SATs should be 1450. Our DC was 1430, exactly at the score line to be NM Commended.
My DS got the same package with a 1400. He got much more money other places including private schools and UMD.
My kid got 10k/year to Dietrich TO. I don't think test scores matter that much if an applicant is strong overall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pitt is over hyped in these circles
Disagree. Fantastic school - especially after the massive donation from Dietrich ($125 million to college of arts and sciences). If anything, DCUM underrates it as an easy early acceptance.
It hits the sweet spot for many students, re: size, urban with green space and D1 football (hard to find good football in a city school), amazing for pre-med/pre-health, psychology, philosophy (ranked globally), and English. Huge rare languages department. Many small classes - better student-teacher ratio than most publics. And lots of opportunities for internships in the city during the school year. And the students are happy, not depressed/bitter/overstressed from a hyper competitive peer group.