Thursday, March 12, 2009

Students should apply to at least a couple of generous schools

Some of the most expensive schools by also give out huge scholarships and can actually be cheaper, in the long run, than public schools for many students.
Students from low- and middle-income families can focus on schools that award aid based on the family's income. Here is a list of schools that claim to meet the full financial need of students.

College Name State
Adrian College (MI)
Amherst College (MA)
Barnard College (NY)
Bates College (ME)
Beloit College (WI)
Boston College
Bowdoin College (ME)
Brown University (RI)
Bryn Mawr College (PA)
California Institute of Technology
Carleton College (MN)
Carroll College (WI)
Chapman University (CA)
Claremont McKenna College (CA)
Colby College (ME)
Colgate University (NY)
College of the Holy Cross (MA)
Columbia University (NY)
Connecticut College
Cornell University (NY)
Dartmouth College (NH)
Davidson College (NC)
Duke University (NC)
Emory University (GA)
Franklin & Marshall
Georgetown University (DC)
Gettysburg College (PA)
Grinnell College (IA)
Hamilton College (NY)
Harvard University (MA)
Harvey Mudd College (CA)
Haverford College (PA)
Lafayette College (PA)
Macalester College (MN)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Middlebury College (VT)
Mount Holyoke College (MA)
Northwestern University (IL)
Oberlin College (OH)
Occidental College (CA)
Pitzer College (CA)
Pomona College (CA)
Princeton University (NJ)
Reed College (OR)
Rice University (TX)
Salem College (NC)
Scripps College (CA)
Smith College (MA)
St. Olaf College (MN)
Stanford University (CA)
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
Swarthmore College (PA)
Tufts University (MA)
University of Chicago
University of North Carolina—Chapel Hill
University of Pennsylvania
University of Richmond (VA)
University of Virginia
Vassar College (NY)
Wellesley College (MA)
Wesleyan University (CT)
Williams College (MA)
Yale University (CT)

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