Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks for the ideas. Her dream school is University of Chicago but we couldn’t afford that even if she got in. What keeps bothering us is the conflict between her really liking a SLAC but it not bring worth it to pay so much for a non-top tier school.
But the non top SLACs give a lot of merit. What about College of Wooster or some place like that?
+1. My kid got $36,000 in academic merit and another $2000 (or $4000) for music at Wooster. It would have cost less than WM.
’Anonymous wrote:Georgia Tech, U Michigan, University of Wisconsin- Madison
Anonymous wrote:Georgia Tech, U Michigan, University of Wisconsin- Madison
Anonymous wrote:If you’re looking for SLACs with merit for top 10% of admits, look at Davidson, Washington & Lee, and U of Richmond. If she’s qualified for Chicago, she could probably get the merit scholarships at these places.
Anonymous wrote:I know I’m oversimplifying things and you can find dedicated students and partiers at ALL schools. She is nerdy and knows that at a huge state school there are focused, studious kids but thinks they’d be hard to find.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re looking for SLACs with merit for top 10% of admits, look at Davidson, Washington & Lee, and U of Richmond. If she’s qualified for Chicago, she could probably get the merit scholarships at these places.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks for the ideas. Her dream school is University of Chicago but we couldn’t afford that even if she got in. What keeps bothering us is the conflict between her really liking a SLAC but it not bring worth it to pay so much for a non-top tier school.
But the non top SLACs give a lot of merit. What about College of Wooster or some place like that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks for the ideas. Her dream school is University of Chicago but we couldn’t afford that even if she got in. What keeps bothering us is the conflict between her really liking a SLAC but it not bring worth it to pay so much for a non-top tier school.
W&M, Oberlin, many women’s schools.