Transfer welcoming schools [NY resident, <$50k]

Good morning. Our freshman daughter is investigating schools to transfer to for the fall of 2025. Attended University of Alabama for the first semester and did not love the sorority situation there. She’s currently home taking local college classes. She’s a very fun, loving, happy kid and is looking for schools in the northeast or mid Atlantic. Medium sized. Good student with good ACT scores.

The question is, can you recommend any schools that have a great orientation program for new transfers coming into the school. Not looking for schools that will not guarantee on campus housing for a transfer. Ideally would have transfer housing where the transfer students have the opportunity to house together And good orientation programs to get them acclimated and on the right path to new friendships.

If this rings, any bells feel free to pass it along.

We are located in New York and our budget will be up to 50K per year

I’d approach this another way – first come up with some schools she is interested in (consider things like size, location, availability of major, Greek Life, big time sports, etc.) and that fit in your budget (merit aid is typically less available as a transfer) and then research transfer acceptance rates and how transfers are handled.

SUNY schools should be in budget.

5 Likes

I would also consider other (affordable) schools she was accepted to last year. Plus one on considering SUNYs.

One point about housing…even though some schools don’t guarantee housing for transfers, they typically/often have it…U Delaware is one example like this.

1 Like

I agree with @happy1 and @Mwfan1921

I was looking at a list of those that provide good support and checked their website - App State might be worth a look. Large but not Bama large.

Does your student have a specific major ?

I was actually going to suggest the SUNY schools, and University of Delaware. She might also look at University of New Hampshire, another smaller state flagship.

2 Likes

I’ve googled state name + transfer and up pops many schools with transfer orientations.

Not sure that’s the best way to pick a school but it might offer you up some names.

Be sure to check merit aid policies for transfers.

In NY schools like New Paltz, Albany, Stony Brook

Some come up in neighboring states too.

Your daughter’s high school GPA and ACT scores may come into play as well as her college grades earned.

Does she enjoy a preppy culture ? (Think Colgate & Bucknell.)

Any likes or dislikes that you are comfortable sharing ?

Any career plans or any particular major ?

I would agree with consideration of SUNY schools but please be aware many have significant Greek communities. For instance…

Obviously whatever went on at Bama may be unique to the Bama Greek experience but something else to consider.

Would your daughter consider women’s college? Some are very transfer friendly.

3 Likes

I agree with others that the various SUNY schools might be your best bet.

One wild idea is McGill. One issue is that large universities in Canada are generally welcoming to transfer students. However, there is another issue. The Quebec education system is different from the system in the rest of Canada and the US. Students in Quebec only do 11 years of elementary/middle/high school, then go to CEGEP (basically junior college) for two years. After two years of CEGEP they then apply to university. This means that many of the students at McGill are entering as U0 students (coming from high schools in the US or the rest of Canada) but many others are coming in as U1 students from CEGEP’s in Quebec. Thus entering with one year worth of university in the US or the rest of Canada would put a student as entering at the same age, typically with similar credits, as half of the other students who are arriving on campus.

The cost for international students at McGill has increased quite a bit over the last few years. It is not as much of a bargain as it used to be for students from the US. I think that it does however still fit a US$50,000 budget as long as you remember to translate CDN$ into US$. Some ability to speak French might be required to graduate.

1 Like

Saint Joseph’s (St. Joe’s) in Philadelphia has a reputation as being very transfer friendly. It has about 4800 undergrads and I suspect would come into budget after merit aid.

This topic was automatically closed 180 days after the last reply. If you’d like to reply, please flag the thread for moderator attention.