Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks for all the suggestions! Those are very helpful! Please keep them coming! I'm researching as fast as I can.
DD told me tonight she's only applying to colleges we're certain we can afford. Our budget is about $29K, max, so she needs about $40K in merit aid for most private colleges.
I'll look into the College of New Jersey and Clark, for starters and the schools in Ohio. St. Olaf's sounds great, but it would be a hard sell to get her to go to MN. She's definitely a homebody.
She's frustrating because she could do a lot more with her abilities, but she'd rather watch movies or chat with her friends. Her teachers have told me this, so it's not just me. I guess her attitude is healthy, but I worry the price she'll pay is she'll be unchallenged in college.
She will not get $40k in merit aid anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: I have to agree with most posters that your post is pretty frustrating. With that said, having just gone through the process with my incredibly bright son with pretty severe LDs, so lower stats than yours, got substantial merit aid from Connecticut College. I didn't know much about it before the process, but it sounds like a great school for someone who wants small liberal arts. He will be going somewhere else thanks to legacy status, but just thought I'd suggest she look at Conn College.
This cannot be true.
Conn College is a NESCAC school, and that group of schools does not offer merit aid or sports scholarships.
https://www.conncoll.edu/admission/scholarships-and-grants/
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if your daughter complains to her friends about her underachieving parents who expect her to go to a private private college but couldn’t even manage to save half the necessary amount and instead expect a teenager to come up with the rest. If only her parents had applied themselves they might have earned more and been able to afford it.
Anonymous wrote:OP back again
She can go to the state U, but she wants to go to a small school.
I wonder if DD's lack of ECs is going to take her out of the running for the high numbers merit scholarships? When I read about the kids who win the big scholarships on college websites, the winners are always kids who built a school for disabled children in Afghanistan and flew a private plane across the US singlehanded, etc.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks for all the suggestions! Those are very helpful! Please keep them coming! I'm researching as fast as I can.
DD told me tonight she's only applying to colleges we're certain we can afford. Our budget is about $29K, max, so she needs about $40K in merit aid for most private colleges.
I'll look into the College of New Jersey and Clark, for starters and the schools in Ohio. St. Olaf's sounds great, but it would be a hard sell to get her to go to MN. She's definitely a homebody.
She's frustrating because she could do a lot more with her abilities, but she'd rather watch movies or chat with her friends. Her teachers have told me this, so it's not just me. I guess her attitude is healthy, but I worry the price she'll pay is she'll be unchallenged in college.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks for all the suggestions! Those are very helpful! Please keep them coming! I'm researching as fast as I can.
DD told me tonight she's only applying to colleges we're certain we can afford. Our budget is about $29K, max, so she needs about $40K in merit aid for most private colleges.
I'll look into the College of New Jersey and Clark, for starters and the schools in Ohio. St. Olaf's sounds great, but it would be a hard sell to get her to go to MN. She's definitely a homebody.
She's frustrating because she could do a lot more with her abilities, but she'd rather watch movies or chat with her friends. Her teachers have told me this, so it's not just me. I guess her attitude is healthy, but I worry the price she'll pay is she'll be unchallenged in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: I have to agree with most posters that your post is pretty frustrating. With that said, having just gone through the process with my incredibly bright son with pretty severe LDs, so lower stats than yours, got substantial merit aid from Connecticut College. I didn't know much about it before the process, but it sounds like a great school for someone who wants small liberal arts. He will be going somewhere else thanks to legacy status, but just thought I'd suggest she look at Conn College.
This cannot be true.
Conn College is a NESCAC school, and that group of schools does not offer merit aid or sports scholarships.
Anonymous wrote:OP back again
She can go to the state U, but she wants to go to a small school.
I wonder if DD's lack of ECs is going to take her out of the running for the high numbers merit scholarships? When I read about the kids who win the big scholarships on college websites, the winners are always kids who built a school for disabled children in Afghanistan and flew a private plane across the US singlehanded, etc.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks for all the suggestions! Those are very helpful! Please keep them coming! I'm researching as fast as I can.
DD told me tonight she's only applying to colleges we're certain we can afford. Our budget is about $29K, max, so she needs about $40K in merit aid for most private colleges.
I'll look into the College of New Jersey and Clark, for starters and the schools in Ohio. St. Olaf's sounds great, but it would be a hard sell to get her to go to MN. She's definitely a homebody.
She's frustrating because she could do a lot more with her abilities, but she'd rather watch movies or chat with her friends. Her teachers have told me this, so it's not just me. I guess her attitude is healthy, but I worry the price she'll pay is she'll be unchallenged in college.