Anonymous wrote:You don’t put smart and SAT 1300 in the same sentence. While high SAT scores don’t necessarily indicate you’re smart, 1300s almost certainly indicate you’re not (because SAT tests are so easy these days).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is wrong with you - Wisconsin is actually a great pick
It is a great pick, but most like 1300 SATs are not going to hack it for admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Florida. How is this even a question? He wants a large, SEC Football school.
/Go Gators
Anonymous wrote:If he has stats for and interest in UF that's a good option. Tons of grads in this area if he wants to come back, great sports and plenty of social options. Every grad I know from there loved it and is happy /successful now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he wants to do STEM, a lot of the big state schools that have a lot of good sports teams also have great STEM programs (engineering, bio fields, chem, etc.). Some ideas:
UofF
UofAriz
Marquette
Not sure if he's competitive with those scores, but those are all good schools for STEM. Weather is obviously different between the three!
Marquette?
It is a smaller parochial school in Milwaukee. Not a big state school.
Marquette is not attached to a parish. It is Catholic but not parochial.
It still isn't a state school with a lot of school spirit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The upside of wanting a kid with good grades who wants to go to a party school is he has a good shot at serious merit money.
The University of Michigan offers full ride scholarships for students from Virginia who major in engineering: https://scholarships.engin.umich.edu/gloria-wille-bell-and-carlos-r-bell-scholarship/
Iowa State also offers generous merit scholarships to out-of-state students: https://www.admissions.iastate.edu/scholarships/freshman/md
The University of Iowa is very fun party school, popular among Chicagoland residents. Nonstop flights from DC, lots of scholarships for students who can keep a 3.50 G.P.A. amid all that partying: https://clas.uiowa.edu/students/scholarships#Entering%20First-Time%20First-Year
It says in that link that 2-5 scholarships per year are awarded and Virginia residents got $20k/year. not sure where you're getting full ride. and this kid probably wouldn't even get into michigan, let alone get a scholarship that is only given to a tiny tiny silver of the incoming class
I knew people who got the scholarship. It used to be a full ride.
It's hard to think of this in the highly competitive atmosphere of this area, but there are a lot of state flagships that would be happy to have your kid and their superior academic achievement bringing up the averages. Lots of scholarships that basically give you in-state tuition at the University of Georgia (presidential waiver), etc. Just look outside the colleges like Michigan, Delaware, etc that have a long track record of attracting out of staters.