Tuesday, July 7, 2020
5 Secrets to Winning Merit Aid
5 Secrets to Winning Merit Aid ââ¬Å"There is money out there for college.â⬠Parents, panicking over the astronomical cost of tuition, hear this reassuring but somewhat vague advice all the time from friends, neighbors, or the media. They have faith that if they simply follow the rainbow of FAFSA forms, local scholarships, and the whims of the financial aid officers at the schools to which their high-achieving children apply, a pot of gold is sure to await them. Unfortunately, the vast majority of middle to upper-middle class families end up discovering that pot not as full as expected or, worse, entirely empty.We say this not to welcome you to some cold, harsh dystopian reality where you should just resign yourself to paying full freight for your teenââ¬â¢s higher educationââ¬ânot in the least. In fact, money for college is indeed sitting out there like low hanging fruit. However, for folks that have solid jobs and bring home comfortable incomes but fall shy of Warren Buffett-level worth by approxima tely 73 billion dollars and change, the only real shot at paying a reduced tuition rate is through merit aidââ¬âa concept that few parents fully grasp. In order to obtain merit-based awards, you first have to understand why the practice exists in the first place and where your child fits within the merit aid solar system.Letââ¬â¢s begin with a brief summary of merit aidââ¬â¢s institutional purpose: In an effort to boost attendance and meet enrollment targets, many colleges have devoted an increasing share of their budgets to attracting desirable students via the offering of merit-based (i.e. non-need-based) financial aid. Using merit scholarships to lure high-achieving or high-scoring students can improve a collegeââ¬â¢s ranking and prestige. In other words, these schools arenââ¬â¢t handing out money because they are nice or because they know that your 401K took a hit last yearââ¬âthey are doing it because your sons and daughters represent a valuable commodity to them. Recognizing this reality is the first step toward achieving a winning mindset with regard to the procurement of merit aid.1) Shift your mindset Students traditionally approach the admissions process from a place of desperation, ââ¬Å"Please, please accept me!â⬠This isnââ¬â¢t exactly the best mindset for a consumer in any marketplace and yes, a college applicant is in fact a consumer. When you realize that many admissions officers feel an equal or greater level of desperation to land a student like you, the tables suddenly turn.Think weââ¬â¢re exaggerating just to make you feel better? Take a guess at what percentage of admissions directors hit their enrollment goals for 2016. Give up?37%.You read that correctly. Just over one-third of colleges and universities nationwide were able to attract enough qualified students to their campuses last year. So, while students may be lining up by the tens of thousands to get into a school like Stanford, there are many schools that will offer you tens of thousands for the honor of calling you a member of their freshman class.The focus is now on constructing a college list comprised of ââ¬Å"good-fitâ⬠schools who are likely to reach deep into their coffers to nab a student with your academic profile. Knowing how to spot these schools takes knowledge as well as a sober understanding of where you stand relative to other applicants at your prospective schools.2) Target selective but not the most selective schools When we say most selective here we mean two thingsââ¬âone in the absolute sense (Harvard, Yale, etc.) and one relative (the most selective schools to which you could conceivably gain admission). The most selective schools in the countryââ¬âthe Ivies and Ivy-caliber institutionââ¬ârarely award scholarships based strictly on merit, primarily because they donââ¬â¢t have to. These schools already attract a surplus of students with remarkable credentials, and as such,à award almos t all of their aid according to financial need.à In other words, Columbia isnââ¬â¢t going to throw money at you, even if you are an amazing enough student to be granted admission, because there are thousands of other ââ¬Å"yousâ⬠in the hopper.Now the relative consideration about selectivity: If your goal is landing merit aid, then you should not be trying to get into the most selective college that will accept you. Outside of the crà ¨me de la crà ¨me, there exist a number of highly selective and moderately selective schools that do regularly offer merit aid to attract studentsââ¬âthe question becomesââ¬âdo they have the incentive to offer it to you? And the answer all comes down to how you compare to the rest of their applicant pool.In general, schools where you are at or above the 75th percentile for SAT scores and GPA/class rank are likely to offer a significant amount of merit aid to land you. Think about it. If, letââ¬â¢s say, you are applying to a sele ctive school like Northeastern University, known for being fairly generous with merit aid. You have a 1400 SAT and finished just outside of the top 10% of your high school class. A 1400 is an excellent score but at Northeastern that is right around the 25th percentile for admitted applicants. Their 75th percentile is closer to 1550. You might get into Northeastern but unless you possess some other rare and valuable gift (howââ¬â¢s your slap shot looking?), you are not likely to get much relief from the $68,537 cost of attendance. Yet, if this same student turned his/her attention to nearby Bentley University, another reputable school known for dangling handsome merit aid packages, the result would likely be quite different. A 1400 SAT is right near their 75th percentile, making you exactly the type of applicant Bentley wants to lure away from its competitors.3) Target private schools Private colleges are more likely to be generous in dishing out merit aid primarily because they h ave larger endowments. Out of the 62 U.S. colleges and universities that have an endowment of over one billion dollars, 73% are private institutions. The public universities that grace this list are still far thriftier with their awards, which is borne out by the data presented in College Transitionsââ¬â¢ searchable list of merit aid awards by institution.Letââ¬â¢s look at how a sampling of flagship state universities that possess billion dollar endowments dish out the merit aid.Institution% Receiving Merit AidAverage AwardUniversity of California, Los Angeles4%$4,240University of North Carolina5%$10,376University of Virginia6%$7,793Compare those relatively meager offerings to the generosity of private universities within those same three statesââ¬âNorth Carolina, Virginia, and California.Institution% Receiving Merit AidAverage AwardDavidson College27%$31,207University of Richmond17%$33,299University of Southern California35%$21,761Wake Forest University21%$30,543Washingto n and Lee University17%$44,684Whittier College28%$20,518Further analysis of this data is needed, however, as we need to see how these awards would impact the overall cost of attendance for both in-state students and out-of-state students. For this comparison weââ¬â¢ll look only at our three North Carolina schools.*Note: We are assuming that no merit aid would be offered at the state school in either scenario as this is the most likely outcome as evidenced by the percentage of students receiving merit aid.In-State Student InstitutionCOA In-StateCOA In-State (with aid)Davidson College$66,678$35,471University of North Carolina$24,529$24,529Wake Forest University$70,558$40,015Okay, so for in-state students, the public flagship remains a lower-cost option even with the offer of an average award at Davidson and Wake Forest. Now, letââ¬â¢s see what happens to an out-of-state student considering all three institutions.Out-of-State StudentInstitutionCOA Out-of-StateCOA Out-of-State (wi th aid)Davidson College$66,678$35,471University of North Carolina$50,112$50,112Wake Forest University$70,558$40,015As you can see, private schools can be far more generous, and if you were an out-of-state candidate choosing between attending one of these excellent institutions, you would have to view Davidson as the superior value (assuming it was a comparably good fit).4) Use your geography to your advantage A recent study revealed that 72% of college-bound students attend school in-state, while 58% choose schools within a 100 mile radius of their home. Only 11% of students opt for an institution more than 500 miles away and just a mere 2% of teens are adventurous enough to enroll in institutions more than 2,000 miles from their parentââ¬â¢s abode. One has to figure that a good portion of this 2% involves individuals in Los Angeles or San Francisco making their way to hotbeds of elite schools on the East Coast, or vice versa. This makes the student who leaves, say, Casper, Wyomi ng to attend Bowdoin College quite the rarity and also someone schools value greatly.This is because colleges crave something called geographic diversity; that is, a student body comprised of young people from all around the country and even the globe. Most institutions of higher learning sincerely believe in the value of bringing together people with diverse backgrounds, upbringings, and experiences onto one campus. Of course, on a more selfish level, they also want to be able to tout on promotional material that their freshman class is comprised of students from all 50 states and however many countries.You can use this to your benefit from admissions standpoint. Consider that 371 members of UPennââ¬â¢s Class of 2019 are Pennsylvania natives; just two are from Mississippi. Thus it is not hard to imagine why star students hailing from Mississippi are at an advantage. While UPenn, specifically, may not have to use merit aid to lure top students, other excellent schools in or near major metropolitan areas will salivate over a qualified applicant from places like Idaho, North Dakota, or Montana. If you are from a similarly remote locale, thereââ¬â¢s a strong chance that it will help from both an admissions and financial standpoint. Your geographic desirability can be parlayed into a merit aid award just by targeting schools far away from home.5) Research formulaic ScholarshipsA growing number of schools literally have formulaic scholarship tables that tell you how much merit money youââ¬â¢re likely to get from them.à These are most commonly found at larger state universities and while many are not guarantees of monetary awards, knowing, in general, what criteria equates to what level of scholarship consideration can be quite informative.For example, West Virginia University has a range of scholarships for students with minimum GPAs ranging from 3.0-3.8 and minimum SAT scores from 1110-1340. At WVU, the amounts awarded to non-residents are much greater than scholarships for West Virginia residents, who already enjoy a greatly reduced in-state tuition. Louisiana State University offers as much as $32,000 per year for a 1490 SAT and a 3.5 but students with significantly lower scores can apply for awards in the range of $500-$2,000 per year. Other schools, like Miami University of Ohio will award anywhere from half-to-full tuition for students with at least a 1480 or higher. Students in the 1280-1380 range are considered for amounts as high as half-tuition.There are countless other schools that offer large awards to students who arenââ¬â¢t nearly as high-achieving as in some of the examples above. Birmingham-Southern College offers five-figure annual awards to students with SATs as low as 950 and GPAs as low as 3.0. At the University of New Mexico, those with SATs in the 1130-1240 range and a B average are eligible for up to 15k in merit aid.College Transitionsââ¬â¢ final thoughtsThere is indeed money available for college in t he form of merit-based aid, but few prospective college students are savvy enough to situate themselves in the best position to receive it. Adopting a shrewd consumer-mindset and strategically targeting schools (especially private ones) where you would be considered a catch are the keys to actually finding that proverbial pot of gold or, more accurately, a sizable tuition discount that will at least make that outrageous sticker price a bit more palatable.
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