Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My chlid wanted a SLAC and gave St Mary's serious consideration. We were not sure where its trajectory would take it though, given enrollment and budget concerns.
Anecdotally, UMDCP just seemed so big that your child will get very little individual attention. That may be true of all large state schools, and I think MD is a strong one. But there are many smaller schools out there that give generous merit aid and help kids make the transition from living home to adulthood. They have lots of caring adults around who notice if someone is falling through the cracks.
+1
My MCPS magnet grads are very happy at at LACs, where we pay about $40K/year after merit scholarships. They were both admitted to UMD-CP but didn't want to attend a large university.
Could you please give us some examples of Slacs high achieving students such as your children should consider?
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loyola Maryland gives very good financial aid if good grades. My daughter did not attend, even though we thought it was a good deal.
They offered her $100,000 off tuition in a merit scholarship over four years. $25,000. All she needed to do was maintain a 2.0 GPA as no gimmicks.
It is a small school with a good donor base and looking to increase rankings so will pay up for kids with good grades
On campus COA over 67k/year. Even with 25k token merit, it's over 40k per year. no chump change
Anonymous wrote:Loyola Maryland gives very good financial aid if good grades. My daughter did not attend, even though we thought it was a good deal.
They offered her $100,000 off tuition in a merit scholarship over four years. $25,000. All she needed to do was maintain a 2.0 GPA as no gimmicks.
It is a small school with a good donor base and looking to increase rankings so will pay up for kids with good grades
Anonymous wrote:Loyola Maryland gives very good financial aid if good grades. My daughter did not attend, even though we thought it was a good deal.
They offered her $100,000 off tuition in a merit scholarship over four years. $25,000. All she needed to do was maintain a 2.0 GPA as no gimmicks.
It is a small school with a good donor base and looking to increase rankings so will pay up for kids with good grades
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My chlid wanted a SLAC and gave St Mary's serious consideration. We were not sure where its trajectory would take it though, given enrollment and budget concerns.
Anecdotally, UMDCP just seemed so big that your child will get very little individual attention. That may be true of all large state schools, and I think MD is a strong one. But there are many smaller schools out there that give generous merit aid and help kids make the transition from living home to adulthood. They have lots of caring adults around who notice if someone is falling through the cracks.
+1
My MCPS magnet grads are very happy at at LACs, where we pay about $40K/year after merit scholarships. They were both admitted to UMD-CP but didn't want to attend a large university.
mAnonymous wrote:It’s not about the price, it’s about the opportunities. There are no colleges in our state that truly excel at my DD’s major. We paid the high price for an OOS research U. Worth every penny. If you are lucky enough to get a relative bargain in state that works, great. But don’t think I must have wasted my money, because that’s just not true.
Anonymous wrote:Remember that there are also many options that would cost a bit more than UMD but significantly less than $70K per year. A lot of OOS publics would probably come in around $40-45K if you're more comfortable with that price range.
Anonymous wrote:My chlid wanted a SLAC and gave St Mary's serious consideration. We were not sure where its trajectory would take it though, given enrollment and budget concerns.
Anecdotally, UMDCP just seemed so big that your child will get very little individual attention. That may be true of all large state schools, and I think MD is a strong one. But there are many smaller schools out there that give generous merit aid and help kids make the transition from living home to adulthood. They have lots of caring adults around who notice if someone is falling through the cracks.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not about the price, it’s about the opportunities. There are no colleges in our state that truly excel at my DD’s major. We paid the high price for an OOS research U. Worth every penny. If you are lucky enough to get a relative bargain in state that works, great. But don’t think I must have wasted my money, because that’s just not true.