Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As my B student goes through the application process, I have been surprised at the generous merit scholarships that other state universities have offered my child. This has made going out of state affordable. My DC may well end up in Virginia--he has applied to several--but these merit scholarships have given my DC many more options than I expected.
How does your kid get these merit scholarships? Does the school help students with this? Sorry, I'm new at this...
This was new to me as well! In our experience, the merit scholarships were managed by the Admissions Office, and in several cases they were based on my DC's grades. Many advertise the merit scholarships. Here are some links as examples:
https://nau.edu/office-of-scholarships-and-financial-aid/freshman-merit-based-tuition-scholarships/
https://admissions.ku.edu/afford/scholarships
Anonymous wrote:Didn’t get into UVA. Didn’t even consider VT. OOS school options were better than what remained in Virginia.
Anonymous wrote:Our DC isn’t applying to a single in-state VA school. They’re all so inferior. Does the DCUM crowd really think these schools are in the same league as MIT, Harvard, Princeton, and Yale?!?! All schools to which my DC will apply and get accepted, to be sure.
Anonymous wrote:Our DC isn’t applying to a single in-state VA school. They’re all so inferior. Does the DCUM crowd really think these schools are in the same league as MIT, Harvard, Princeton, and Yale?!?! All schools to which my DC will apply and get accepted, to be sure.
Anonymous wrote:My kid had a 4.2 gpa and a 1520 SAT, wanted to major in CS and didn’t get into UVA (expected) or VT (should have had a shot), and didn’t want GMU. So he’s at UIUC, which is a higher ranked CS program anyway.
Anonymous wrote:My kid had a 4.2 gpa and a 1520 SAT, wanted to major in CS and didn’t get into UVA (expected) or VT (should have had a shot), and didn’t want GMU. So he’s at UIUC, which is a higher ranked CS program anyway.
Anonymous wrote:As my B student goes through the application process, I have been surprised at the generous merit scholarships that other state universities have offered my child. This has made going out of state affordable. My DC may well end up in Virginia--he has applied to several--but these merit scholarships have given my DC many more options than I expected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As my B student goes through the application process, I have been surprised at the generous merit scholarships that other state universities have offered my child. This has made going out of state affordable. My DC may well end up in Virginia--he has applied to several--but these merit scholarships have given my DC many more options than I expected.
How does your kid get these merit scholarships? Does the school help students with this? Sorry, I'm new at this...
Anonymous wrote:Did not get into VT which was the top choice. Went OOS instead but is thinking of transferring to VT next year.
Anonymous wrote:Rather than fret and obsess over tons (too-many) AP classes, hoping to maybe get a chance to attend JMU or VT, apply out of state and go to a higher ranked National University. Enjoy a more balanced high school experience and expand your horizons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is a junior and starting to look at schools. Stats wise probably competitive for VT, JMU, W&M, not UVA. If your FCPS kid went to a public/private out of state, what was the thinking behind it? DD wants to live “somewhere other than VA” which we get but VA has so many great schools that it is tough to think about paying twice as much to go elsewhere (we are full pay but have other kids as well).
My son really liked Purdue and the out of state cost was about $5k more a year at the time and was worth it for us. He also benefited when they did not raise tuition for the entire time attended.
Similarly, WM is the most expensive state school, but you keep the tUition you go in with, even if it’s raised for future classes. Very nice, when my other kids is goIng up 2-3% a Year.
Anonymous wrote:As my B student goes through the application process, I have been surprised at the generous merit scholarships that other state universities have offered my child. This has made going out of state affordable. My DC may well end up in Virginia--he has applied to several--but these merit scholarships have given my DC many more options than I expected.