<p>Have you applied and already been accepted? Or are you planning to apply next year?</p>
<p>I am gonna apply in July,but I am 99% sure I will be accepted at CSU.
why?</p>
<p>^ Just wondering if it makes sense to suggest additional schools to consider, or if it is too late. </p>
<p>Since it isn’t too late, you could post a new thread here or on the Search & Selection forum, or the Parents forum, asking for suggested schools. If you include your stats (GPA, SAT/ACT scores), and other criteria (size of school, planned major, preferred location, financial considerations) you would probably get a lot of good suggestions. It’s a good idea to apply to more than one school.</p>
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<p>yea of course, but the problem is the following:
I have to live with my uncle for the first year in Cleveland,he is an Assistant professor in Case western reserve ,but I can’t go to CWRU due to the high tuition.
so there is 1 University left in Cleveland and it is CSU
maybe I can transfer after the sophomore year.</p>
<p>If you can have your uncle declared your legal guardian then most likely you could go to CWRU for cheap or even free since he works there.</p>
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<p>can you be more specific??
do I get financial aid if I have some 1 who is working there??
I would appreciate it if you can go into the details Bro.</p>
<p>Many universities if not most will provide cheap or free education for the children of their employees. It will vary by university. Ask your uncle.</p>
<p>for their children??!!
I am his nephew.</p>
<p>Get him declared your legal guardian and you are essentially his child in the eyes of the law. Check to make sure that still works with the university though before going through the hassle. It may work some places and not others.</p>
<p>BTW ,I am not a US citizen ,I will be in US with Student Visa & I am an adult.
can I still do the legal guardian thing??</p>
<p>Probably not if you are an adult but I am not really sure. It will depend on the college itself. Like I said, ask your uncle, not me.</p>
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<p>Wright State (and University of Dayton I think) have interesting and worthwhile Human Factors Engineering programs, not a surprise considering where the field originated and where much of the early research was done (Wright Pat Air Force Base).</p>