Anonymous wrote:Elite colleges don’t offer merit scholarships. So the answer is no.
Anonymous wrote:A relative was a Woodruff Scholar at Emory (full tuition) some years ago, but it looks like the program is still running.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HS bf got a full ride to an HYPSM from a local businessman, who happened to be an alum of the school. BF met with him for the alum interview during application process. The biz guy followed up after admissions announcement and BF told him he was going to Michigan as parents could not afford the HYPSM tuition. A day later his parents got a call with the offer. This was nearly 40 years ago.
So, not exactly what OP is seeking, but he did win a (one-time) full-ride scholarship to an elite college.
As it is a one-off, this is a gift, not a scholarship per se. I have tremendous admiration for the businessman who gave it. Amazing.
Anonymous wrote:My kid got the Stamps scholarship, which is full ride. But the schools that participate in Stamps, while strong, are not super elite. I know that UChicago used to participate, but not anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't Harvard automatically offer a full ride to anyone whose family income is less than a certain threshold?
Yes, but that's FA, not merit aid. These full-ride scholarships to highly ranked schools (read upthread) are not based on financial need.
If you are getting into Harvard and not paying for it, it doesn't matter what you or they call it, you got there on merit.
Anonymous wrote:HS bf got a full ride to an HYPSM from a local businessman, who happened to be an alum of the school. BF met with him for the alum interview during application process. The biz guy followed up after admissions announcement and BF told him he was going to Michigan as parents could not afford the HYPSM tuition. A day later his parents got a call with the offer. This was nearly 40 years ago.
So, not exactly what OP is seeking, but he did win a (one-time) full-ride scholarship to an elite college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't Harvard automatically offer a full ride to anyone whose family income is less than a certain threshold?
Yes, but that's FA, not merit aid. These full-ride scholarships to highly ranked schools (read upthread) are not based on financial need.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a kid (California resident) who turned down Harvard and Yale for a scholarship to Berkeley
I knew several classmates who turned down Ivy League schools to go to UVA in state. At the time (early 2000s) Ivy's were $40k a year and UVA was I think $9k in state. Probably a wise choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nephew received a full ride to Brown in 2015, graduating in 2019.
This was financial aid, not a merit scholarship.
No it was merit. He had a 4.0 unweighted and a super high SAT. I don’t know what the scholarship was called, but it was based on merit.
DP here.
Brown (and other ivies) do not give merit scholarships.
Nearly every student at those schools has stats like those attributed to your nephew.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nephew received a full ride to Brown in 2015, graduating in 2019.
This was financial aid, not a merit scholarship.
No it was merit. He had a 4.0 unweighted and a super high SAT. I don’t know what the scholarship was called, but it was based on merit.
Anonymous wrote:No one wins a merit scholarship, they EARN it. Even the way you pose the question is insulting.