<p>Go to the Collegeboard.com web site and search for each college. When you find the college you are looking for, go to the “Cost and Financial Aid” section and scroll down to the Financial Aid Statistics part.</p>
<p>When I do that, for the colleges you’ve listed, I find:</p>
<p>Loyola Marymount: 259 out of 693 students with need had full need met; average percentage of need met - 82% </p>
<p>Pepperdine - 146 out of 464 students with need had full need met; average percentage of need met - 87% </p>
<p>University of Hawaii (Honolulu): 151 out of 671 students with need had full need met; average percentage of need met - 62%</p>
<p>University of Redlands: 85 out of 449 students had full need met; average percentage of need met- 71%</p>
<p>So obviously the answer to your question is that NONE of the colleges you listed meet 100% of need. I am wondering whether you are confusing the term “need blind” (meaning that they don’t consider need in making admissions decisions) with a commitment to meet 100% need of admitted students.</p>
<p>To be honest with you, I don’t think that your stats are going to be good enough to get into any full need college, so I think you need to consider other options for financing college – such as looking at starting at a community college or a lower cost public college, or enrolling in a program such as Americorps or ROTC that will offer some level of funding support. You will qualify for a full Pell grant, of course – and of course you also qualify for subsidized loans.</p>