Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Acceptance rate at Colby and Bowdoin - 9%
Acceptance rate at Hamilton - 14%
Acceptance rate at Bates - 17%
Acceptance rate at Kenyon and Oberlin - 35%
Acceptance rate at Grinnell 11% but fewer east coast applicants than the ones you asked about.
This may be part of your answer.
Colby and Bowdoin - no merit aid
Hamilton - no merit aid
Bates - no merit aid
Kenyon and Oberlin - merit aid available
Grinnell - merit aid available
There you have your answer.
Colby may not give merit aid but they have committed to being one of the most affordable small colleges in the country. Families that make less than $150K (which is a lot outside of the DC bubble) pay no more than $15k per year and more than 70% of families receive financial aid. Plus, the facilities are extraordinary. It does have the drawback of being in the middle of nowhere.
That is irrelevant for families in the donut hole. For them, it's all about merit aid.
This seemed false and it is. 46 pct of Colby students receive need based aid in line with most of these schools. Colby’s financial aid is typical among SLACs. https://afa.colby.edu/apply/college-profile/
Looks like someone doesn’t know what the donut hole is.
Colby says: "Colby College meets 100% of demonstrated need without student loans. Families with a total income of up to $75,000 with typical assets can expect a parent or guardian contribution of $0. Families earning $65,000 to $150,000 with typical assets will have a parent or guardian contribution of $15,000 or less. In recent years, more than 95 percent of families with a total income of $200,000 or less have qualified for financial aid."
The say the annual cost is $86k and it looks like a donut hole family would end up paying $35-50k, which is not terrible considering that lots of "affordable" options are still $40k per year.
A donut hole family is a family that doesn't qualify for aid. They get zero aka a donut hole. Usually refers to a family that is just above the threshold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Acceptance rate at Colby and Bowdoin - 9%
Acceptance rate at Hamilton - 14%
Acceptance rate at Bates - 17%
Acceptance rate at Kenyon and Oberlin - 35%
Acceptance rate at Grinnell 11% but fewer east coast applicants than the ones you asked about.
This may be part of your answer.
Colby and Bowdoin - no merit aid
Hamilton - no merit aid
Bates - no merit aid
Kenyon and Oberlin - merit aid available
Grinnell - merit aid available
There you have your answer.
Colby may not give merit aid but they have committed to being one of the most affordable small colleges in the country. Families that make less than $150K (which is a lot outside of the DC bubble) pay no more than $15k per year and more than 70% of families receive financial aid. Plus, the facilities are extraordinary. It does have the drawback of being in the middle of nowhere.
That is irrelevant for families in the donut hole. For them, it's all about merit aid.
This seemed false and it is. 46 pct of Colby students receive need based aid in line with most of these schools. Colby’s financial aid is typical among SLACs. https://afa.colby.edu/apply/college-profile/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Acceptance rate at Colby and Bowdoin - 9%
Acceptance rate at Hamilton - 14%
Acceptance rate at Bates - 17%
Acceptance rate at Kenyon and Oberlin - 35%
Acceptance rate at Grinnell 11% but fewer east coast applicants than the ones you asked about.
This may be part of your answer.
Colby and Bowdoin - no merit aid
Hamilton - no merit aid
Bates - no merit aid
Kenyon and Oberlin - merit aid available
Grinnell - merit aid available
There you have your answer.
Colby may not give merit aid but they have committed to being one of the most affordable small colleges in the country. Families that make less than $150K (which is a lot outside of the DC bubble) pay no more than $15k per year and more than 70% of families receive financial aid. Plus, the facilities are extraordinary. It does have the drawback of being in the middle of nowhere.
That is irrelevant for families in the donut hole. For them, it's all about merit aid.
This seemed false and it is. 46 pct of Colby students receive need based aid in line with most of these schools. Colby’s financial aid is typical among SLACs. https://afa.colby.edu/apply/college-profile/
Looks like someone doesn’t know what the donut hole is.
Colby says: "Colby College meets 100% of demonstrated need without student loans. Families with a total income of up to $75,000 with typical assets can expect a parent or guardian contribution of $0. Families earning $65,000 to $150,000 with typical assets will have a parent or guardian contribution of $15,000 or less. In recent years, more than 95 percent of families with a total income of $200,000 or less have qualified for financial aid."
The say the annual cost is $86k and it looks like a donut hole family would end up paying $35-50k, which is not terrible considering that lots of "affordable" options are still $40k per year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Acceptance rate at Colby and Bowdoin - 9%
Acceptance rate at Hamilton - 14%
Acceptance rate at Bates - 17%
Acceptance rate at Kenyon and Oberlin - 35%
Acceptance rate at Grinnell 11% but fewer east coast applicants than the ones you asked about.
This may be part of your answer.
Colby and Bowdoin - no merit aid
Hamilton - no merit aid
Bates - no merit aid
Kenyon and Oberlin - merit aid available
Grinnell - merit aid available
There you have your answer.
Colby may not give merit aid but they have committed to being one of the most affordable small colleges in the country. Families that make less than $150K (which is a lot outside of the DC bubble) pay no more than $15k per year and more than 70% of families receive financial aid. Plus, the facilities are extraordinary. It does have the drawback of being in the middle of nowhere.
That is irrelevant for families in the donut hole. For them, it's all about merit aid.
This seemed false and it is. 46 pct of Colby students receive need based aid in line with most of these schools. Colby’s financial aid is typical among SLACs. https://afa.colby.edu/apply/college-profile/
Looks like someone doesn’t know what the donut hole is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Acceptance rate at Colby and Bowdoin - 9%
Acceptance rate at Hamilton - 14%
Acceptance rate at Bates - 17%
Acceptance rate at Kenyon and Oberlin - 35%
Acceptance rate at Grinnell 11% but fewer east coast applicants than the ones you asked about.
This may be part of your answer.
Colby and Bowdoin - no merit aid
Hamilton - no merit aid
Bates - no merit aid
Kenyon and Oberlin - merit aid available
Grinnell - merit aid available
There you have your answer.
Colby may not give merit aid but they have committed to being one of the most affordable small colleges in the country. Families that make less than $150K (which is a lot outside of the DC bubble) pay no more than $15k per year and more than 70% of families receive financial aid. Plus, the facilities are extraordinary. It does have the drawback of being in the middle of nowhere.
That is irrelevant for families in the donut hole. For them, it's all about merit aid.
This seemed false and it is. 46 pct of Colby students receive need based aid in line with most of these schools. Colby’s financial aid is typical among SLACs. https://afa.colby.edu/apply/college-profile/
Looks like someone doesn’t know what the donut hole is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Acceptance rate at Colby and Bowdoin - 9%
Acceptance rate at Hamilton - 14%
Acceptance rate at Bates - 17%
Acceptance rate at Kenyon and Oberlin - 35%
Acceptance rate at Grinnell 11% but fewer east coast applicants than the ones you asked about.
This may be part of your answer.
Colby and Bowdoin - no merit aid
Hamilton - no merit aid
Bates - no merit aid
Kenyon and Oberlin - merit aid available
Grinnell - merit aid available
There you have your answer.
Colby may not give merit aid but they have committed to being one of the most affordable small colleges in the country. Families that make less than $150K (which is a lot outside of the DC bubble) pay no more than $15k per year and more than 70% of families receive financial aid. Plus, the facilities are extraordinary. It does have the drawback of being in the middle of nowhere.
That is irrelevant for families in the donut hole. For them, it's all about merit aid.
This seemed false and it is. 46 pct of Colby students receive need based aid in line with most of these schools. Colby’s financial aid is typical among SLACs. https://afa.colby.edu/apply/college-profile/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Acceptance rate at Colby and Bowdoin - 9%
Acceptance rate at Hamilton - 14%
Acceptance rate at Bates - 17%
Acceptance rate at Kenyon and Oberlin - 35%
Acceptance rate at Grinnell 11% but fewer east coast applicants than the ones you asked about.
This may be part of your answer.
Colby and Bowdoin - no merit aid
Hamilton - no merit aid
Bates - no merit aid
Kenyon and Oberlin - merit aid available
Grinnell - merit aid available
There you have your answer.
Colby may not give merit aid but they have committed to being one of the most affordable small colleges in the country. Families that make less than $150K (which is a lot outside of the DC bubble) pay no more than $15k per year and more than 70% of families receive financial aid. Plus, the facilities are extraordinary. It does have the drawback of being in the middle of nowhere.
That is irrelevant for families in the donut hole. For them, it's all about merit aid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Acceptance rate at Colby and Bowdoin - 9%
Acceptance rate at Hamilton - 14%
Acceptance rate at Bates - 17%
Acceptance rate at Kenyon and Oberlin - 35%
Acceptance rate at Grinnell 11% but fewer east coast applicants than the ones you asked about.
This may be part of your answer.
Colby and Bowdoin - no merit aid
Hamilton - no merit aid
Bates - no merit aid
Kenyon and Oberlin - merit aid available
Grinnell - merit aid available
There you have your answer.
Colby may not give merit aid but they have committed to being one of the most affordable small colleges in the country. Families that make less than $150K (which is a lot outside of the DC bubble) pay no more than $15k per year and more than 70% of families receive financial aid. Plus, the facilities are extraordinary. It does have the drawback of being in the middle of nowhere.
Anonymous wrote:Come on, this is all about some people never being able to accept the concept that anybody west of Pittsburgh & East of California is smart enough to boil water.
These same people often consider themselves to be very open minded, & they would bite anybody’s head off if they even hinted that the people in Boboslavia or Bobostan were falling slightly behind the people in other countries. But they have no problem telling you every single Midwesterner is a bumbling hick.
Anonymous wrote:when there are similar schools on the East Coast? Not trying to be snarky; genuinely wondering what these schools have that a Bates/Bowdoin/Colby/Hamilton does not.
Anonymous wrote:when there are similar schools on the East Coast? Not trying to be snarky; genuinely wondering what these schools have that a Bates/Bowdoin/Colby/Hamilton does not.