Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I turned down ivy for a state college. I had to pay my own way and looking at the cost difference made it a no brainer. I was going for engineering so a ivy school wasn’t going to give me a salary leg up that business would give. Most employers of engineers really don’t care where you got your degree as long as it is a known and accredited university. I worked two jobs in the summer of 60 hours a week and worked through the school year to come out without any student debt in 2009.
Perhaps if you’d gone to the Ivy you would have learned to write more effectively.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know someone who turned down Harvard for Amherst and one who turned down Yale for William and Mary.
Dumb and dumber.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think many doughnut hole families will have to turn down Ivies. It's not that unusual.
+1
I know donut hole families that did this. I am from CA and they typically got full merit or athletic scholarships to UC schools.
Ivies do not give sports scholarships but they do give financial aid. One thing to note is that they typically give the same level of financial aid to international applicants (lots of Canadian hockey players on generous financial aid).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ivies don’t have scholarships, so no may anyone turned one down. They do have financial aid, but that is need-based.
They don’t do athletic scholarships but they do award merit scholarships which can be for athletics.
No, they don’t offer merit scholarships either.
I know someone who was recruited to Harvard for crew. They absolutely give out athletic scholarships. This is a myth.
It was probably a financial aid package.
Anonymous wrote:I turned down an Ivy for Michigan. Michigan seemes more fun and there are programs at Michigan (like the Honors Program and Residential College) that provide lots of individual attention.
Anonymous wrote:My kid turned done Columbia, UPenn, Dartmouth and higher ranked schools like UChicago for Cornell—the Ivy that had the best program for what he wanted to study—and one of the schools that gets abused around here. I wasn’t pissed. He did what was right for him.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter turned down an Ivy for University of Florida. I think it probably happens more often than people think it does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ivies don’t have scholarships, so no may anyone turned one down. They do have financial aid, but that is need-based.
They don’t do athletic scholarships but they do award merit scholarships which can be for athletics.
No, they don’t offer merit scholarships either.
I know someone who was recruited to Harvard for crew. They absolutely give out athletic scholarships. This is a myth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know quite a few people who turned down Ivy's. Not everybody wants to go to those schools.
Then why apply to them?
Anonymous wrote:I think many doughnut hole families will have to turn down Ivies. It's not that unusual.
Anonymous wrote:What percentage of people turn down Harvard?