Chances for scholarships

<p>My stats are as follows:</p>

<p>White female from NY at very good public HS that doesn't rank (but I am top 8%ish).</p>

<p>UW GPA: 93
SAT: (first try)
CR - 700
W - 800
M - 710
TOTAL = 1410/2210</p>

<p>SAT IIs: 770/750/700/560
AP USH - 4</p>

<p>Senior year courses w/ midyear grades:
AP Calc BC - 85
AP Macroeconomics - 90
AP English Lit - 89
Adv Dance - 97
AP Spanish Lang - 95
AP Bio - 90</p>

<p>ECs:
School newspaper (10th = writer, 11th = entertainment copy editor, 12th = managing/copy editor)
Nat'l Honor Society (President)
Tutoring club for students at the middle school (founder and co-president)
Camp counselor for 4 summers (volunteered one year)
Summer homestay program in Spain (not a big deal, but some of my essays had to do with it)
Studying French independently
Tutor math weekly (paid)</p>

<p>Very good recs & essays.</p>

<p>I want to major in either linguistics, Spanish, int'l economics, or int'l relations.</p>

<p>...Do I have a shot at any of the scholarships? I haven't done much research on this because Dickinson is not one of my top choices, but it's a great school for what I want to study.</p>

<p>45 views? C'mon, folks. Help a brotha out.</p>

<p>i have relatively similar stats (few more ecs, slightly lower sat but higher act) and i received the highest scholarship, $15,000/year plus the engage the world fellowship (one time $3,000 award for various study options).</p>

<p>that being said, d'son seems very intent on giving out scholarships based on the "whole package"- meaning essays, interview, and the like... i think you stand a decent change of getting some merit aid</p>

<p>Thanks for the input.</p>

<p>Does Dickinson give a lot of merit aid, just a sprinkling, or just to a few people?</p>

<p>Dickinson actually has more scholarships than they advertise on the website. If you search hard, you can find more, but they're really hard to come by. I was accepted EA and when I got my financial aid, I was surprised because I thought that Dickinson only had the three scholarships they boast, but there are really so many that you can receive.</p>

<p>Certain scholarships are based on need, but I think the majority of them are based on merit and merit and need.</p>

<p>blueyed1, have I congratulated you on your acceptance yet? ;)</p>

<p>my stats were virtually identical last year and i was offered the $15,000/yr scholarship as well. i wish i would have taken it...</p>

<p>oncearunner, Why didn't you take it? Or did you go to a different school?</p>

<p>i went to colby college instead. that was a mistake...</p>

<p>Can you elaborate? What don't you like about Colby?</p>

<p>okay, where to begin...
last fall i only applied to seven schools, and was rejected by two and waitlisted by one. that left me with dickinson, colby, colgate, and penn state-university park to choose from. penn state was too big for my liking and colgate just gave me the "no" feeling...i walked on campus, and there just was no connection whatsoever. i had only visited colby once before, and that was during the fall prior to my senior year, and i did not have time to go visit again after i was accepted, since i live in nj, and it was hard for me to get up there. anyhow, i did an overnight visit with dickinson, and liked it a lot. in fact, i liked it so much that i checked off the "yes, i will be attending dickinson college" box on the reply form. so, why didn't i go? well, where i live in nj (very close to a very well known ivy league university) people put a very big emphasis on going to the "best" school that you get into. if you go to a school, it's assumed that that was the best you could do. thus, for most kids, it's ivy league or bust. i never applied to an ivy because i was very much against this mentality, or so i thought, until i inexplicably whited out my dickinson reply and decided i would have to go to colby if colgate wouldn't do. so now to colby...
okay, so i went up to colby this past fall, and i knew from the beginning that it wasn't going to be right. don't get me wrong, there are a lot of nice people up there, and some really great professors, but overall, i was not impressed with the academic program and there are quite a few trust fund babies if you know what i mean. there is grade inflation like whoa (if it weren't for my microeconomics class--econ, by the way, is the strongest and most difficult at colby and one of the best at a liberal arts college in the country--and my ridiculuous professor and is antiguated beliefs, i would have had over a 4.0 last semester. oh, and did i mention that i hardly did any work?), and there is nothing--and i mean nothing--to do in waterville.
if you're really into skiing and have the funds to support that kind of endeavor, then maine is probably the place for you. if you're not, however, the winters can get quite lonely (and cold!) as you're forced to sit around in the middle of nowhere while all your friends go to sugarloaf. there is an unbelievable schism between the town of waterville and the college, and students are not warmly received in town. i was naive enough to think that maine was just some happy, go lucky kind of place, but after being there for a semester i learned about the 70 plus recent registered sex offenders in the town of waterville alone, as well as a campus abduction and murder that went under media radar about two years back.
anyway, carlisle isn't a hopping place or anything, but at least you're in close proximity to civilization, even if it is only harrisburg. for the money, you can get an education that is similar in quality to colby (check out the princeton review academic ratings...they're really close). if you are interested in colby, feel free to pm me and i'll try my best to answer your questions. don't get me wrong...colby isn't a horrible place and it could be the right place for you depending on who you are...i'm just not that type of person.</p>