Post your questions here, and I'll be happy to give you some feedback as to what they mean for your student.
double b said:
That score is within the top 5 - 7 percentile in the nation. Very solid score and could very well wind in contention for National Merit if they continue on this trajectory. Just make sure they continue to read, preferably academic material, and then be aggressive with their test prep after their sophomore year.
Kool said:
Wow, thanks for doing this!!!
My son, a junior, got his scores back today. He got a 1460, with a Selection Index of 219. We live in Georgia, it would appear he is right above the cutoff for National Merit for the last two years.
We have put away money for his college. His dream school is Georgetown (right now). The question I have is, does having a PSAT score, and possibly getting National Merit, really help him get INTO colleges? A parent of a child who received it a few years ago told me it didn't seem to matter, but that seems strange. When I was little, Texas A&M bent over backwards to bring in National Merit Scholars.
Thanks for doing this.
Thanks for your response as well. I did a bit of research and there are some schools which would probably offer a full ride for a National Merit Scholar. Texas Tech and OU are two listed. However, we love our son and would never do that to him!Another Doug said:Kool said:
Wow, thanks for doing this!!!
My son, a junior, got his scores back today. He got a 1460, with a Selection Index of 219. We live in Georgia, it would appear he is right above the cutoff for National Merit for the last two years.
We have put away money for his college. His dream school is Georgetown (right now). The question I have is, does having a PSAT score, and possibly getting National Merit, really help him get INTO colleges? A parent of a child who received it a few years ago told me it didn't seem to matter, but that seems strange. When I was little, Texas A&M bent over backwards to bring in National Merit Scholars.
Thanks for doing this.
FYI, almost all the NMSF make Finalist (14,000/15,000), just make sure he fills out application right and has good essays and recommendations.
My kid was NMF in 2020. Some schools don't care, some schools really want it because it brings up their numbers. Georgetown won't care, A&M does. The day she got NMSF A&M stopped by in person to drop off a bag of goodies. The schools that really care make it worth while.
NMF at A&M will basically get you an A&M degree for 50% instate cost (OOS gets a tuition wave I believe) which I thought was the best deal of the schools my kid was considering.
UT doesn't care.
While we had money saved up, She decided on UTD over A&M, Full-ride+ scholarship, honors
program, first to register, best dorms best on-campus aprtment, stipend to study abroad. So we are just saving that money for grad school now. You can see how it has benefitted that school, as their test score numbers are even with UT now.
Florida public schools have something called Benacquisto Scholarship Program, which is supposed to cover cost of attendence. Most of the SEC schools (except Georgia and Vandy) will have really good deals too.
They are not documented well, but a few of of the 2nd tier private schools are pretty agressive with NMF, I think I remember Fordham was on record of having the best $ for NMF (free tuition).
Just so strange. Ole Miss, Miss State, South Carolina, all of these surrounding schools offer huge scholarships but UGA - nada.Another Doug said:
For us NMSF was official the following September.
My kid applied to and got into UGA, but they offered no money.
Can you explain the selection index and what tests that includes. I'm new to this and got cofused going from the PSAT score to the selection index. ThanksAnother Doug said:
NM doesn't go off the final score, but off the selection index which is calculated by adding the 3 sections and multiplying by 2. A perfect score would by (40+40+40)*2=240
The cutoff for Texas NMSF is usually 219 or 220
ReadingJAG03 said:Can you explain the selection index and what tests that includes. I'm new to this and got cofused going from the PSAT score to the selection index. ThanksAnother Doug said:
NM doesn't go off the final score, but off the selection index which is calculated by adding the 3 sections and multiplying by 2. A perfect score would by (40+40+40)*2=240
The cutoff for Texas NMSF is usually 219 or 220
This depends on the type of schools you are looking at. If you're speaking of Texas A&M, then yes, the odds of receiving an academic, merit-based scholarship are virtually impossible. I should know; I was a part of the process when they overhauled the awarding of those scholarships 12 years ago.HECUBUS said:
Don't expect anything from high test scores. It's only one tiny over hyped slice of the pie. You just want to avoid an elimination score.