Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can afford college and expect a full ride?
There’s a big gap between not qualifying for need-based aid and being able to afford a 90K a year private university.
Right!
Someone who identifies as UMC has a very large income and choose not to save. OP is not asking for some help, they are asking for a full ride.
PP, you must be an uninformed policy maker. Newsflash: UMC families can have health problems with huge five or six figure medical bills, if they’re 1st Gen college they are likely supporting or helping their parents, and guess what? No inheritance. Stay in your lane.
Many of us have health issues, no instance, dslecial needs kids, aging parents and more and yet, we still save.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can afford college and expect a full ride?
There’s a big gap between not qualifying for need-based aid and being able to afford a 90K a year private university.
Right!
Someone who identifies as UMC has a very large income and choose not to save. OP is not asking for some help, they are asking for a full ride.
PP, you must be an uninformed policy maker. Newsflash: UMC families can have health problems with huge five or six figure medical bills, if they’re 1st Gen college they are likely supporting or helping their parents, and guess what? No inheritance. Stay in your lane.
Anonymous wrote:W&L offers the full ride Johnson scholarship to 10% of the incoming class. You have to apply by Dec 1st (but can apple RD) and write an additional essay. They recruit some really top stat kids this way that turn down T20 schools for the scholarship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are upper middle class and looking for a full ride, you need to apply to colleges that are at least two tiers lower than your regular target schools. For example, a student with a 4.0 unweighted GPA and a 1450 SAT would need to look at schools with an average GPA of 3.0 and SAT of 1150.
This is true. I saw it this cycle. The key thing is to thoroughly research the intended major to ensure good outcomes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m trying to understand WTF would make any school worth $360,000.
Nothing. Absolutely nothing.
If you don’t get it. You don’t get it.
The school is why my kid has the job they do right now. The network. Not STEM
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can afford college and expect a full ride?
There’s a big gap between not qualifying for need-based aid and being able to afford a 90K a year private university.
Right!
Someone who identifies as UMC has a very large income and choose not to save. OP is not asking for some help, they are asking for a full ride.
Anonymous wrote:If you are upper middle class and looking for a full ride, you need to apply to colleges that are at least two tiers lower than your regular target schools. For example, a student with a 4.0 unweighted GPA and a 1450 SAT would need to look at schools with an average GPA of 3.0 and SAT of 1150.