Awesome article! Very informative.
I do want to add this…More competitive, more selective schools = more aid and donor scholarships.
My kid applied to three colleges in the state of Michigan and was accepted at all three.
Western Michigan University
Michigan State University
University of Michigan
I am listing these schools in order of cost and selectivity. Western Michigan University was the least selective. It’s not a difficult school to get into, and it’s the least expensive of the three. University of Michigan is highly selective, and is the most expensive of the three.
When my daughter’s aid offers came through, however…by a LANDSLIDE…the less expensive, less selective school had a bigger net price tag. They simply do not have the deep bench of donors to pull grant money and scholarships from.
Also…what’s considered “financial need” is different at more selective schools.
At Western, a family making 60K a year doesn’t qualify for much of anything. At University of Michigan, a family making 60K can qualify for a lot of aid.
At Western, my daughter was offered a $500 merit scholarship, a $1500 grant, and $1000 in work study per year.
At University of Michigan, my daughter receives a $5000 per year departmental scholarship. She also gets $11,300 in grants per year, and $3000 of work study. She picked a less expensive housing option, and cooks her own dinner and packs her own lunch to avoid the extremely expensive university meal plan. She buys books used, and in some cases can even check them out from the library. She started school with about $13,000 in college savings (we tried very hard to save $1000 per year for her, some years worked, some didn’t) She works full time in the summer. She will graduate with less than $10,000 of debt. There are research jobs available for her at the University if she decides to stay there for a year after graduation, and pay her debt off while she applies to grad schools…which is her current plan.
Had she chosen to go to the least expensive, least selective school…she would graduate almost $70,000 in debt.
The next school…Michigan State…which has middle of the road selectivity…would have netted $40,000 of debt.
The choice was pretty clear.
It pays to get into more selective schools.
Also…as others have pointed out…local scholarships are your best odds.
My kiddo got a $2000 scholarship from a local woman’s organization. She got a $500 scholarship from a local writing contest.