Anonymous wrote:Did you submit FAFSA/SSN?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if you don't apply for financial aid when applying, most t50 will NEVER allow you to apply for financial aid. Not when you lose your job or when a sibling goes off to college. Don't be foolish.
Need blind colleges are need blind. Need aware are need aware.
if you're mom or dad has been in CS for an entire career, believe me .. all schools are totally okay with that. even if you do want to go into CS. It may show "lack of creativity" but it also shows a depth of understanding. Colleges can also wonder if you come from a artsy family or finance family and want to go into engineering, do you really know what an engineer day to day life looks like? And where pay tops out?
Don't over think this stuff.
Is this really true? I went to a T20 full need (and I think need blind, they are now, I don't remember) university without financial aid. By the beginning of my junior year, my Dad had cancer, my younger sibling was in college, and my sibling had been in a psychiatric hospital for over a year. My university stepped up and I got significant aid.
Anonymous wrote:I don't see how this works. I get that it's possible that a college might look at an application from a candidate whose work at Walmart and who wants to be a radiologist and admire that independence, and select them over the kid with two radiologist parents. But I have a lot of trouble believing that the same college will look at an application from a single family house in an HCOL zip code, with a blank for parent occupation, and think "I bet they work at Walmart, let's give them a hand up", instead "Wow, look at these people trying to work the system" or "Let's google them and see what they do". Which at best will have a neutral impact on the application, and at worst will hurt the candidate.
Did you submit FAFSA/SSN?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if you don't apply for financial aid when applying, most t50 will NEVER allow you to apply for financial aid. Not when you lose your job or when a sibling goes off to college. Don't be foolish.
Need blind colleges are need blind. Need aware are need aware.
if you're mom or dad has been in CS for an entire career, believe me .. all schools are totally okay with that. even if you do want to go into CS. It may show "lack of creativity" but it also shows a depth of understanding. Colleges can also wonder if you come from a artsy family or finance family and want to go into engineering, do you really know what an engineer day to day life looks like? And where pay tops out?
Don't over think this stuff.
Is this really true? I went to a T20 full need (and I think need blind, they are now, I don't remember) university without financial aid. By the beginning of my junior year, my Dad had cancer, my younger sibling was in college, and my sibling had been in a psychiatric hospital for over a year. My university stepped up and I got significant aid.
Anonymous wrote:This whole thread is made up BS.
Anonymous wrote:This is a bad take. Seeing your parents work in CS and exposing you to hackathons in 5th grade is totally great
It’s not so great to say you have an internship at Stars Hallow Realty when mom or dad works there. That’s true. But it’s totally fine to say you work there for pay. Especially if you can describe a for pay job that makes sense for your age.
Anonymous wrote:Parent employment helps determine low income for financial aid status, on the one end, full pay on the high end, and possible donors for the advancement office on the very high end.
What I don't understand is why some podcast would advocate not including parent employment for the same student who isn't including SSN in order to signal full pay. Parent employment can signal full pay; why leave it out if the parent's employment is obviously full pay?
Anonymous wrote:The truth in our family is that both parents are retired. Seems to signal rich, no?