Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rice has merit but really only a handful of students will get it.
I don't know about now but rice used to have great need based merit scholarships.
Full rides for students on free lunch from schools like stuyvesant with really high SAT scores
Also, which classes/teachers did you enjoy at WTMA?Anonymous wrote:A bit off your topic OP, but if he ends up staying in public, I recommend you explore Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth to take supplemental classes. Or Well Trained Mind Academy, which is for homeschoolers but could still work. Strongly recommend the latter--better classes than anything my kids took in our highly rated FFX County publics, plus supportive and bright peers.
AoPS is better for mathAnonymous wrote:A bit off your topic OP, but if he ends up staying in public, I recommend you explore Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth to take supplemental classes. Or Well Trained Mind Academy, which is for homeschoolers but could still work. Strongly recommend the latter--better classes than anything my kids took in our highly rated FFX County publics, plus supportive and bright peers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where can I find a list of selective schools with merit scholarships?
For example, I know about:
Duke
WashU
Vanderbilt
Emory
USC
UVA
Wake
UNC
Tulane
As others said, there is not merit like you think it's merit. It's a handful of top, top students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go to this link and look at % of kids w/out need getting merit, and average amount:
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/merit-aid
If percentage is under 20%, ignore. Duke is 2%, for example. Treat as if it has no merit aid whatsoever.
If percentage is 40% or more, prioritize.
Not op but what's interesting is even the schools that give a ton of merit are so expensive they still don't make sense financially: who cares about getting 20k off when tuition is 80k? It's still insanely expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Go to this link and look at % of kids w/out need getting merit, and average amount:
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/merit-aid
If percentage is under 20%, ignore. Duke is 2%, for example. Treat as if it has no merit aid whatsoever.
If percentage is 40% or more, prioritize.
Anonymous wrote:Rice has merit but really only a handful of students will get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where can I find a list of selective schools with merit scholarships?
For example, I know about:
Duke
WashU
Vanderbilt
Emory
USC
UVA
Wake
UNC
Tulane
Wake, Tulane, and USC are the only schools on this list that give merit aid to more than the tiniest percentage of students…