<p>I was recently to Duke and Amherst, but things fell through in regards to financial aid. I was wondering if you know of any good schools with rolling admissions that I could apply to now. </p>
<p>Thanks,
Matt</p>
<p>BTW They need to be able to provide a good amount of financial aid or be very inexpensive.</p>
<p>The National Association for College Admission Counseling puts together a [url=<a href="http://www.nacac.com/survey/results.cfm%5Dlist%5B/url">http://www.nacac.com/survey/results.cfm]list[/url</a>] of colleges with space avaliable for freshman in fall 2005. The list also includes whether the college is willing/able to give out financial aid.</p>
<p>University of Texas at Arlington and Dallas both take apps now</p>
<p>New College of Florida is one I'd definitely recommend. Great school, very small like Amherst and Duke, yet is public and an honors college.</p>
<p>Others I see that are good schools are University of Pittsburgh, Susquehanna, Fordham, Rochsester Institute of Technology, and Goucher.</p>
<p>All those schools are pretty solid... While some may be private, I gotta figure that if you capable of getting into Amherst and Duke you could get some good merit from these schools.</p>
<p>The University of Puget Sound (Tacoma WA) offers rolling admission. Good school.</p>
<p>Look into Knox (Illinois) Butler and Wabash (both Indiana, Wabash is all-male) on the NACAC list</p>
<p>University of Notre Dame is on the list too, you should definitely apply there... normally people who like Duke like Notre Dame.</p>
<p>Yeah, Notre Dame, Fordham, and UPitt are all great!!!!</p>
<p>According to the list, University of Notre Dame does not have spots available for freshmen, only for transfer students.</p>
<p>Willamette University in Oregon is another excellent school on the list.</p>
<p>Ouch... did you try getting the fin. aid offices at Duke and Amherst to re-evaluate?</p>
<p>maybe you could defer a year or something and reapply for aid independently or osmething? work for a year?</p>
<p>Merit money and financial aid are going to be tight at this time of year, so if you need major money, the chances are going to be on the slim side. I agree with wondrist, Have you considered maybe doing a gap year? Deferring at one of the schools you've been accepted to and working to raise some funds? Or starting at a less expensive local college and then transferring?</p>