Received a call from TAMU today asking for money. The caller, a pleasant student, just manning the phones performing a job to contact alumni. We had a great conversation and shared a lot of experiences. In the end, I told him I was prepared to give the University more than $200,000, but unfortunately it will go to the University of Nebraska. ...
I am Class of 81 and Masters 83. My son graduates HS this May. He has the grades, the ACT, the community hours, the AP, the dual credits, 10th out of 232 class rank, swims competitively year round/honors scholastic athlete and works 15 hrs per week at a supermarket during the school year and 25 hrs/wk in the summer. We are out of state so I'm paying out of state tuition either way. FAFSA states I/we qualify for nothing. I know my son has the resume, it's just a matter of which university made him feel comfortable.
This is what I found through the process, so far. All schools mentioned below reached out to us first.
Some nearby and notables....Baylor, Kansas, SMU, and TCU were in our face from the get go with information to consider them. Didn't get squat from A&M. (I told the student on the phone today I was stunned that being legacy really didn't matter and my feelings are rather mutual now) Did receive something from West Texas A&M. Received a fair amount from Texas Tech. Penn, Brown, and Dartmouth were the Ivies that reached out.
My son narrowed his list to (alphabetical)
Case Western Reserve University
Fordham University
South Dakota State University
Tulane University
University of Chicago
University of Nebraska
The schools above provided plenty of materials to review and kept you up informed as to what was taking place on campus.
My son is Pre-Med bound to University of Nebraska...pretty certain.
Case Western is still recruiting him, but I think he's losing interest.
Hands down Nebraska's recruiting process was tops. Parents and students know what to expect, what to do, where to go and when. Communications were/are extraordinary, either in-person, on the phone and online. Online systems for the process made the most sense out of the university systems we registered on. His application was accepted and merit-based scholarship was awarded in Oct or Nov. It was amazingly fast versus every one else. I fully understand how my son made his decision for choice.
Fordham was second. Good communication overall.
Case Western third . Good communication but slow.
South Dakota State. Good communication but long spaced times between updates. Phone communications were excellent.
University of Chicago. Was okay.
Tulane fell off the list early, but their communication was really good.
He's got a 1/2 ride to Nebraska and we're being told there will be more.
He's got a 1/4 ride to Fordham (I told him if he decides to go Business versus Pre-Med, Fordham should be his pick as the Gabelli School of Business is tough to beat)
He's got a 3/4 ride to South Dakota State
I don't know if the above info helps anyone, I hope it does.
No comments about the A&M process, they didn't provide an opportunity to allow me to comment.
I am Class of 81 and Masters 83. My son graduates HS this May. He has the grades, the ACT, the community hours, the AP, the dual credits, 10th out of 232 class rank, swims competitively year round/honors scholastic athlete and works 15 hrs per week at a supermarket during the school year and 25 hrs/wk in the summer. We are out of state so I'm paying out of state tuition either way. FAFSA states I/we qualify for nothing. I know my son has the resume, it's just a matter of which university made him feel comfortable.
This is what I found through the process, so far. All schools mentioned below reached out to us first.
Some nearby and notables....Baylor, Kansas, SMU, and TCU were in our face from the get go with information to consider them. Didn't get squat from A&M. (I told the student on the phone today I was stunned that being legacy really didn't matter and my feelings are rather mutual now) Did receive something from West Texas A&M. Received a fair amount from Texas Tech. Penn, Brown, and Dartmouth were the Ivies that reached out.
My son narrowed his list to (alphabetical)
Case Western Reserve University
Fordham University
South Dakota State University
Tulane University
University of Chicago
University of Nebraska
The schools above provided plenty of materials to review and kept you up informed as to what was taking place on campus.
My son is Pre-Med bound to University of Nebraska...pretty certain.
Case Western is still recruiting him, but I think he's losing interest.
Hands down Nebraska's recruiting process was tops. Parents and students know what to expect, what to do, where to go and when. Communications were/are extraordinary, either in-person, on the phone and online. Online systems for the process made the most sense out of the university systems we registered on. His application was accepted and merit-based scholarship was awarded in Oct or Nov. It was amazingly fast versus every one else. I fully understand how my son made his decision for choice.
Fordham was second. Good communication overall.
Case Western third . Good communication but slow.
South Dakota State. Good communication but long spaced times between updates. Phone communications were excellent.
University of Chicago. Was okay.
Tulane fell off the list early, but their communication was really good.
He's got a 1/2 ride to Nebraska and we're being told there will be more.
He's got a 1/4 ride to Fordham (I told him if he decides to go Business versus Pre-Med, Fordham should be his pick as the Gabelli School of Business is tough to beat)
He's got a 3/4 ride to South Dakota State
I don't know if the above info helps anyone, I hope it does.
No comments about the A&M process, they didn't provide an opportunity to allow me to comment.