Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She might get some merit aid from Wooster, Juniata, Kalamazoo or any of those midwestern liberal arts colleges ranked in the 40s-60s. They tend to be high quality education, friendly welcoming vibe, lots of personalized attention.
She might get in Mt. Holyoke, but not likely to get much merit aid, but it sounds like it would be a good fit.
She might have a chance at VTech (I know it's big and not at all like W&M, but it's nerdy and they want more girls in physics) which would be must cheaper.
Unlikely, but certainly worth a try. OP's daughter's GPA is great. Va Tech GPA ranges bottoms 25% to top 75% a 3.88 to 4.25 for entering (not accepted, which is higher) students, but the SAT is at the bottom 25% of the entering class (range is 1200-1370). But we loved Tech on our tour. It is large but the architecture and focus around on the drill field makes it feel smaller than it is. http://research.schev.edu//enrollment/B10_FreshmenProfile.asp
For Va Tech- their internal data is better than SCHEV. Here it is, broken down by major: https://irweb.ir.vt.edu/webtest/FreshmenSummary.aspx
Anonymous wrote:For the majors she's interested in, VA Tech is a much better choice than William and Mary. I would think that with her grades, and an essay that mentions her autism, she could get into Tech.
How does she (and you) feel about her going far away, given her disability? I would think a school within 2-3 hours might be of interest. Another school that's not too far with good environ. sci and physics would be Pitt.
I think the PPs on this thread that are recommending SLACs are not paying much attention to her interests. SLACs will not have the majors that she wants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She might get some merit aid from Wooster, Juniata, Kalamazoo or any of those midwestern liberal arts colleges ranked in the 40s-60s. They tend to be high quality education, friendly welcoming vibe, lots of personalized attention.
She might get in Mt. Holyoke, but not likely to get much merit aid, but it sounds like it would be a good fit.
She might have a chance at VTech (I know it's big and not at all like W&M, but it's nerdy and they want more girls in physics) which would be must cheaper.
Unlikely, but certainly worth a try. OP's daughter's GPA is great. Va Tech GPA ranges bottoms 25% to top 75% a 3.88 to 4.25 for entering (not accepted, which is higher) students, but the SAT is at the bottom 25% of the entering class (range is 1200-1370). But we loved Tech on our tour. It is large but the architecture and focus around on the drill field makes it feel smaller than it is. http://research.schev.edu//enrollment/B10_FreshmenProfile.asp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She might get some merit aid from Wooster, Juniata, Kalamazoo or any of those midwestern liberal arts colleges ranked in the 40s-60s. They tend to be high quality education, friendly welcoming vibe, lots of personalized attention.
She might get in Mt. Holyoke, but not likely to get much merit aid, but it sounds like it would be a good fit.
She might have a chance at VTech (I know it's big and not at all like W&M, but it's nerdy and they want more girls in physics) which would be must cheaper.
Unlikely, but certainly worth a try. OP's daughter's GPA is great. Va Tech GPA ranges bottoms 25% to top 75% a 3.88 to 4.25 for entering (not accepted, which is higher) students, but the SAT is at the bottom 25% of the entering class (range is 1200-1370). But we loved Tech on our tour. It is large but the architecture and focus around on the drill field makes it feel smaller than it is. http://research.schev.edu//enrollment/B10_FreshmenProfile.asp
OP here: According to Naviance scatter grams, nearly everyone from her school with 4.0 or better was accepted to Tech. I am an alumni. I would rather her go to a smaller school. I fear she would fall between the cracks at tech (she will apply their).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She might get some merit aid from Wooster, Juniata, Kalamazoo or any of those midwestern liberal arts colleges ranked in the 40s-60s. They tend to be high quality education, friendly welcoming vibe, lots of personalized attention.
She might get in Mt. Holyoke, but not likely to get much merit aid, but it sounds like it would be a good fit.
She might have a chance at VTech (I know it's big and not at all like W&M, but it's nerdy and they want more girls in physics) which would be must cheaper.
Unlikely, but certainly worth a try. OP's daughter's GPA is great. Va Tech GPA ranges bottoms 25% to top 75% a 3.88 to 4.25 for entering (not accepted, which is higher) students, but the SAT is at the bottom 25% of the entering class (range is 1200-1370). But we loved Tech on our tour. It is large but the architecture and focus around on the drill field makes it feel smaller than it is. http://research.schev.edu//enrollment/B10_FreshmenProfile.asp
Anonymous wrote:If she loves the environment and would value a beautiful, unique school with an EXTREMELY small student body, consider College of the Atlantic (also test optional).
Anonymous wrote:She might get some merit aid from Wooster, Juniata, Kalamazoo or any of those midwestern liberal arts colleges ranked in the 40s-60s. They tend to be high quality education, friendly welcoming vibe, lots of personalized attention.
She might get in Mt. Holyoke, but not likely to get much merit aid, but it sounds like it would be a good fit.
She might have a chance at VTech (I know it's big and not at all like W&M, but it's nerdy and they want more girls in physics) which would be must cheaper.