"Meet full need" schools can vary significantly in their net prices.

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<p>It appears that the Common Data Set definition of “meet need” can use grants, scholarships, work-study, or subsidized federal direct loans (i.e. $3,500 frosh, $4,500 soph, $5,500 jr/sr). So a school which uses only those types of financial aid (not unsubsidized loans, parent loans, or private alternative loans) against 100% of need (however it determines “need”) can answer 100% for the need met question.</p>

<p>it is entirely possible that there are colleges that answer this question incorrectly, or use a different definition of “meet 100% of need” on their web sites than the Common Data Set definition.</p>

<p>For the schools specifically, here is how their NPCs break down the amounts for the $20,000 income family example (UCLA is in-state):</p>

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School  List    EFC&    Need    Grant   Loan    Work    Net Price
USC     60033    2500^  57533*  49533    5500   2500    10500
UCLA    32563       0   32563*  23963       8600+        8600
Yale    61900    1600   60300   57500       0   2800     4400</p>

<p>& Federal EFC for UCLA, institutional EFC for Yale.
^ USC's NPC calls this "estimated remaining costs", rather than 
  calling it EFC.
* Not explictly listed in NPC, but calculated from List - EFC.
+ UCLA's NPC lists "self-help" = $8,600; it says that loans and
  work-study will be offered.


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<p>Obviously, a school can repackage the same net price different ways (e.g. moving it around between EFC, subsidized federal direct loans, unsubsidized federal direct loans, and work-study), which can result in different answers for the Common Data Set’s “meet need” questions.</p>