Claire&TheBoys
The Queen of the Castle!
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2007
- Messages
- 6,331
Congrats to everyone! It might be two late for us but how did you get merit scholarships? My daughter is top 10% of her class and in Texas it is automatically in at the state school. She just applied to one and got in because of her school rank. I asked the school that her acceptance letter did not include any kind of scholarship and was told that everyone that goes to the school is top 10% (basically nothing special). My husband and I make to much for any kind of FASA but we were always on planning on paying for her Bachelors. Just want to make sure I didn't miss out on everything. Some of her other friends that rank lower is going to a different school in the same state received some scholarship so I am thinking it is because of the school she is going to. I was told that usually, Engineer scholarships from the school come the second year of college when they really dive into their major. Just kind bummed she worked so hard and not to even get a little scholarship money.
We're in Florida, which is of course different from Texas. In Florida, all students who meet certain criteria qualify for Bright Futures scholarships, ranging from 50% to 75% to 100%. That's just the in-state tuition, of course, not room and board or fees. I think my son will qualify for the 75% tier, if he ever manages to fill out his forms for the service hours he's performed and turn in the application. I want him to apply even though he's going out of state, because if he gets there and hates it or changes his major I want him to be able to come back to Florida and have that waiting. There's only a certain window when you can apply as a senior and if you don't, you're out of luck.
He did choose a large university in a neighboring state. Based on his GPA and SAT score, he automatically qualified for a merit scholarship of about $12,000 per year, I think. However, the admissions team also reviews each application individually for their leadership opportunities, activities, and community service and awards other merit scholarships on a competitive basis. He was awarded a competitive scholarship worth almost $30,000 per year with that process (which supercedes the automatic one). Then, as the offers were finalized, he was also offered an engineering scholarship worth $2500 per year. That is within a couple thousand dollars of full out of state tuition. He is nowhere near Top Ten of his class - maybe top 15-20% of his class of 450 with a GPA over 4.0. His school has an advanced program with lots of DE and AP classes and all of those are weighted, so lots of his peers have GPAs well over 4.0. I was very happy that this university does not require out of state students to complete FAFSA. I know we wouldn't have qualified for any aid anyway, and I dislike sharing financial information.
There are definitely schools out there with deep pockets - I'm thankful that the one he chose specifically for a particular engineering discipline is one of them.