DD was one of those "top" high school students. Unfortunately, admissions officers have STACKS of "top" student applications, according to a friend who IS an admissions officer at an Ivy. You have to be really outstanding at something (NSF science fair national winner, for example) to get noticed and offered a free ride. DD was offered decent money by several good private schools ($30K-$40K in scholarship/grant money), but it'd still leave her about $20K-$25K a year "short" and as my smart girl said, "I want to be an English teacher and a dancer. How am I going to repay $80-$100K?" so she is at UMaine. NO, they don't have the dance program she wanted, but there's enough of a dance community for her to stay involved and progressing, while studying at a great English department that offers courses she loves. I guess my real point here is... DON"T assume that because your kid is in the top 5% of her class, has good SAT scores, took and passed AP classes, that there will be money at the end of the rainbow.
Cost? $280/credit hour, or $8960 a year. Fees are another $2200 a year (DON"T get me started on the $950/semester general fee... just a way for the state to say they haven't raised tuition...), room and board about $8300 if you are in a double room. Luckily her books are only around $400 a year (yes, we buy used, or rent, although that didn't work out too well). SO... about $20K a year, but she is only borrowing about $9K a year instead of $22K/year if she'd gone to the first choice school.