Page 1 of 1
BU & BC scholarship comparison?
Posted: Thu Nov 04, 2010 12:01 pm
by goodcharles
I got a fee waiver from BU, so I'm definitely applying there. BC didn't give me one. I'm wondering if I should bother applying to BC. I'm already applying to a number of schools in T20-T30 range for safeties, so I won't have a problem not getting into any even without applying to BC. But I hear from some people that BU is likely to raise my scholarship if BC offers a higher figure. Should I bother applying to BC to see if they offer me a higher figure? Or, is it possible that BU will up scholarship offers if schools OTHER THAN BC (say... Illinois or GW) offer me higher figures?
Thanks!
Re: BU & BC scholarship comparison?
Posted: Thu Nov 04, 2010 7:47 pm
by goodcharles
bump!
Re: BU & BC scholarship comparison?
Posted: Thu Nov 04, 2010 7:57 pm
by dakatz
Can't hurt to apply to both. Just from personal experience, BU offered me a very hefty scholarship, while BC offered me nothing. Not entirely sure why that was. I think BU is more generous with scholarships in general. And if you have a basis for negotiating more, they seem to be willing to listen. They really want to get the best students they can, so I think thats what makes them willing to up certain offers if the situation calls for it.
Re: BU & BC scholarship comparison?
Posted: Thu Nov 04, 2010 8:01 pm
by dakatz
Oh, and if your stats are 166/3.84, neither BU or BC is a safety for you. They are solid target schools. Make sure you understand your school range before you applying thinking your chances are better than they actually are. Your target range are the 20-30 schools. Anything above that is very iffy and would certainly be reaches.
Re: BU & BC scholarship comparison?
Posted: Thu Nov 04, 2010 10:59 pm
by maine08080
Based what I have seen from LSN, BC's max scholarship offer is $90k, but BU is slighly more generous and willing to go into six figures. You need some sick numbers though. Someone correct me if I'm wrong.
Seeing that your numbers are more target, don't count on scholarship money.