Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it true that merit aid is more frequently awarded to male students? (perhaps because so many campuses are majority female)?
No.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is a really dumb question, OP.
+1
OP, if you want to guesstimate what kind of merit aid your child will receive at a given school, use the Net Price Calculator to get that info. In our case, it proved to be fairly accurate.
The Net Price Calculator will estimate financial aid, but it is silent on merit aid.
I don't think it's a dumb question at all, OP. It's very difficult to get an answer, though, because merit aid is all over the place and depends on the college and your child's desirability for that college. If you have a superstar kid, merit aid, including a free ride, is available at very competitive colleges like Duke, U of Chicago, Hamilton and many others.
My child got merit offers at Lehigh, Dickinson, GW, and several others. Most of the Colleges that Change Lives www.ctcl.org offer merit aid because they are not top schools in terms of competitiveness for admissions. They are all great schools, though, and your child will get a great education at any of them.
Look at the links a PP posted. There is lots of information on the web about which schools offer merit aid. But awards are very unpredictable. Financial aid, on the other hand, is predictable. Use the Net Price Calculator on each school's website, and you'll have a good idea of how much FA to expect from each school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is a really dumb question, OP.
Why? This not the same as need based aid. I want to know what schools are good at discounting the full sticker price with merit aid.
+1.
I believe it's a brilliant question. I'd love to see a ranking of the most generous schools at Merit Scholarships -- I suspect that my kids would take that into account when they decide where to apply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is a really dumb question, OP.
Why? This not the same as need based aid. I want to know what schools are good at discounting the full sticker price with merit aid.
Anonymous wrote:Sat 2160
Gpa 3.8 ish
A lot of AP and honors classes
NHS, good ECs (long duration tutoring, community home repair-not overseas)
Held a job through most of HS
I think his essay helped him a lot
Tulane-25k/yr
UVM- around 10k/yr
Michigan-8k/yr
NYU-10k/yr
Wisconsin-8 or 10k/yr
This was our first kid applying and I was surprised at the merit money offered. I was told that you just don't know and so be brunt with them about what we could afford and let them apply where they want with that firm knowledge. For example, Tulane was out of our budget but with the merit money it was in range. NYU remained out of range even with some money , and he never considered it at that point.
3.8 GPA, that's unweighted?
Anonymous wrote:Is it true that merit aid is more frequently awarded to male students? (perhaps because so many campuses are majority female)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grinnell College 15K per year for total of 60K
Luther College 22K per year for total of 88K
Mt St Mary's: 22K per year total 88K
Macalester: 12K per year for total of 48K
Our HHI knocks us out of any aid besides merit from the schools.
He's going to Grinnell.
Grinnell is a top choice for my DD. She hopes to visit through a minority recruitment weekend and I think she'll love it. Can you share your son's stats?
Sure...
unweighted GPA 3.5
ACT 31
5 APs
24 hours college credit from community college (that's max they will transfer in so he didn't even bother with taking AP test and they never asked for scores or asked if he was taking test)
Good EC's including HOBY, Boy's State, board member of local teen philanthropy group, and 2 sport athlete.
My advice is to connect with someone at Grinnell. A coach, an admission rep, etc. and keep in touch. Let them know its your first choice and if accepted DD will attend.
Thanks. She is similarly strong and has connected with the admissions rep. If she gets accepted to the fall program she will have the chance to connect even more. She won't be applying ED, however, because we want to see what options she has from a merit standpoint even if we might end up choosing a place that is full pay. Hoping that won't hurt her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grinnell College 15K per year for total of 60K
Luther College 22K per year for total of 88K
Mt St Mary's: 22K per year total 88K
Macalester: 12K per year for total of 48K
Our HHI knocks us out of any aid besides merit from the schools.
He's going to Grinnell.
Grinnell is a top choice for my DD. She hopes to visit through a minority recruitment weekend and I think she'll love it. Can you share your son's stats?
Sure...
unweighted GPA 3.5
ACT 31
5 APs
24 hours college credit from community college (that's max they will transfer in so he didn't even bother with taking AP test and they never asked for scores or asked if he was taking test)
Good EC's including HOBY, Boy's State, board member of local teen philanthropy group, and 2 sport athlete.
My advice is to connect with someone at Grinnell. A coach, an admission rep, etc. and keep in touch. Let them know its your first choice and if accepted DD will attend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is a really dumb question, OP.
+1
OP, if you want to guesstimate what kind of merit aid your child will receive at a given school, use the Net Price Calculator to get that info. In our case, it proved to be fairly accurate.
The Net Price Calculator will estimate financial aid, but it is silent on merit aid.
I don't think it's a dumb question at all, OP. It's very difficult to get an answer, though, because merit aid is all over the place and depends on the college and your child's desirability for that college. If you have a superstar kid, merit aid, including a free ride, is available at very competitive colleges like Duke, U of Chicago, Hamilton and many others.
My child got merit offers at Lehigh, Dickinson, GW, and several others. Most of the Colleges that Change Lives www.ctcl.org offer merit aid because they are not top schools in terms of competitiveness for admissions. They are all great schools, though, and your child will get a great education at any of them.
Look at the links a PP posted. There is lots of information on the web about which schools offer merit aid. But awards are very unpredictable. Financial aid, on the other hand, is predictable. Use the Net Price Calculator on each school's website, and you'll have a good idea of how much FA to expect from each school.
Anonymous wrote:My DD got lots of merit at schools she didn't want to go to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter got $40,000 ($10,000 a year) at University of Florida. We were Florida residents so she also got the Bright Futures Scholarship. She was a National Merit Scholar finalist. She graduated last year and is teaching in DC! I have a son at Univ. of Colorado. $8,000 a year merit. I have another at Ole Miss. Full ride.
Nice!
ThanksThose three were our easy kids. We have one that enlisted in the Air Force right out of high school. We are super proud of her. She wasn't a great student, but she has turned out to be a really good Airman. We're hoping she'll be more ready for college when she gets out. The military will pay which is nice. Our youngest wants to go to MIT. He had better pray for merit aid.