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  #1  
Old 11-10-2002, 06:49 PM
Dionysus Dionysus is offline
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Question Non-academic scholarships-Yay or nay?

We go to college to LEARN. However, as we know, tuition can be a butt. So some students recieve scholarships to pay the expenses, of course.

Some common non-academic scholarships include sports, music/art, and ethnic/racial. Some less other non-academic scholarships I heard are scholarships for blonds, dyslexics, regional, parents occupation , height, etc.

Do you believe it is right to give scholarships for non-academic reasons, eventhough college is an academic institution?
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  #2  
Old 11-10-2002, 07:09 PM
KappaTarzan KappaTarzan is offline
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i may be biased on this, because i recieved a non academic scholarship.. it was for students with the rare bleeding disorder i have. it is genetically inherited, but most people merely carry the disorder, not express it as i do.. through the american hemophaliac society (which doesn't deal just with hemophalia) i recieved a scholarship to help pay for my first year of college expenses... this was paid for by people who have the disorder, adn wished to donate to help others with it...
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  #3  
Old 11-10-2002, 07:58 PM
Kevin Kevin is offline
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The school wouldn't have an orchestra if it didn't pay non majors (like me) to play in it. I get a tuition waver that covers most everything every year. I think it's great because otherwise our music performance majors would have no orchestra to play in.
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  #4  
Old 11-11-2002, 10:14 AM
AchtungBaby80 AchtungBaby80 is offline
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Non-academic scholarships can be good, I think. Hey, anything that helps counter the cost of tuition is good, right?

But what you've got to realize is, most scholarships (even non-academic ones) require you to maintain a certain GPA or meet other conditions, and if you don't, then you're up the creek. I used to be really biased towards people with athletic scholarships, mostly because the people I knew who had them didn't have to do nearly the amount of work to pass a class as the rest of us (they had to keep a good GPA to play, so profs were lenient with them). I was pretty darn jealous of my boyfriend, too, because he was on an athletic scholarship...until he got injured and couldn't play, and poof! there went his scholarship money. It was like the school just said, "Oh, well, you're no good to us anymore, so we're taking away your money." Not cool.

So I guess my point is that non-academic scholarships aren't just free money with no strings attached...you have to work to keep them, just like you do with an academic scholarship.
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  #5  
Old 11-11-2002, 10:51 AM
Kevin Kevin is offline
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Oh I second that... I have to rehearse with the orchestra for around 9 hours per week... I have to go on trips with them. It is lots of time and energy.. I feel I earn my tuition waver.

If I ever have a kid they're going to need to be either 4.0 students, good musicians or incredible athletes. I don't want them to have to pay tuition either
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  #6  
Old 11-11-2002, 11:17 AM
ladybug1116 ladybug1116 is offline
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I totally echo what ktsnake said about music scholarships. FSU has one of the top music programs in the country....and music scholarships/waivers were only given to music majors. In a sense it was an academic scholarship.....and there were a TON of strings attached. In addition you did have to maintain a specific GPA, which was in line with what was required to maintain the academic scholarships.

I fully support scholarships of any kind....be it for athletics, music, medical conditions, etc. Besides, many specialized scholarships come from private endowments so who am I to say who the recipients should be?
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  #7  
Old 11-11-2002, 12:14 PM
poodleNtraining poodleNtraining is offline
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Well, in DC there's this place where you can go to find CRUCIAL money, grants scholarships and all. And they have the eccentric ones too. The way I see it, if these rich philanthropists and companies want to give money to a girl with red hair, hey, I'm signing up. It's their money, they can ive it out how they want. There are plenty of "academic" scholarships, and plenty of need based, so why not have money for other folks. I've heard of some weird ones, like you had to be left handed and you father was a vet, or if you've ever been to some obscure island in 1987, just crazy stuff!
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Old 11-11-2002, 01:49 PM
Munchkin03 Munchkin03 is offline
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Question

What's wrong with having scholarships related to parents' occupation? I know that there are schools which give scholarships to students whose parents are veterans, same goes for trashmen or people who work for a certain company. I don't think there's anything wrong with that, especially if the parent's company doesn't do tuition assistance (as some do). They aren't huge scholarships or anything--maybe $500, one-time? What's wrong with that?

I only received two scholarships--both for my performance with Academic Team/Quiz Bowl. One was for being captain of the County Champion Team, and the other was for being on the State Team. I'm supportive of non-academic scholarships because they allow students who go to schools like mine, where there are no academic/athletic scholarships and it's hard to get financial assistance, to cut down on their costs of education. Not everyone's at the top of their class, but still needs help in affording college.
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  #9  
Old 11-11-2002, 03:10 PM
jonsagara jonsagara is offline
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Absolutely. My chapter hands out two checks each quarter that cover the cost of tuition for the two most-active brothers.
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  #10  
Old 11-11-2002, 05:29 PM
DeltAlum DeltAlum is offline
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First, let me say...

1) I support non academic scholarships.
2) I have no problem, per se, with athletic scholarships.

However, I have a real problem with so called "highly selective" schools who claim to give "need only" scholarships.

For one thing, most of them aren't telling the truth. If they're NCAA Divison I schools, they are required to give a certain number of athletic scholarships in order to keep their NCAA status. That's not "need based."

Additionally, "need only" scholarships penalize the type of student that all colleges allegedly want if his/her parent fall into a certain income bracket.

Our son is a case in point. He was a National Merit Scholar, 4.3 weighted GPA, VP of his student body, active in the community, 1730 SAT and 34 ACT, with tons of extra curriculars. He won several national awards in music (and theatre) and presented a math paper for an audience of math professors and students from all over the country. (he was "perfect" in math on both standarized tests)

He was accepted at every college to which he applied.

Northwestern, one of his top choices offered $39, 000 per year in LOANS, with no scholarship money at all. Someone with a much lower GPA who was not nearly as active would have gotten a much better deal because of "need". It was pretty much the same at Yale, University of Cincinnati College Conservatory and the Boston Conservatory.

(Then we got mail from them wondering why he chose to go elsewhere!)

Thankfully, The University of Oklahoma recruits National Merit kids and gave him both academic and talent based scholarships which amount to pretty much a full ride. He didn't even apply there! But when he visited, he really liked it.

The kicker is that while I'm making reasonable money now (although still only about half of what I made before), I was out of work for over a year (corporate merger) and we used up all of our financial reserves and a lot of the college money we had put aside during that period. That didn't make a difference, though.

Finally, I'm not arguing against need based scholarships -- but against the schools who ONLY look at need.

It penalizes the kids who "do it right" in high school.

There should be BOTH.

End of rant.

Edited to mention that our local Delt Alumni Chapter underwrites scholarships for our two local chapters which are given to sophomore members who show leadership potential in their chapters.
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Last edited by DeltAlum; 11-11-2002 at 05:31 PM.
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  #11  
Old 11-11-2002, 05:43 PM
Peaches-n-Cream Peaches-n-Cream is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by DeltAlum

Our son is a case in point. He was a National Merit Scholar, 4.3 weighted GPA, VP of his student body, active in the community, 1730 SAT and 34 ACT, with tons of extra curriculars. He won several national awards in music (and theatre) and presented a math paper for an audience of math professors and students from all over the country. (he was "perfect" in math on both standarized tests)

How did your son get a 4.3 GPA and a 1730 SAT? I thought the highest one could get is a 4.0 GPA and 1600 on the SAT. Has that changed?
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  #12  
Old 11-11-2002, 05:57 PM
chopper816 chopper816 is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by Cream


How did your son get a 4.3 GPA and a 1730 SAT? I thought the highest one could get is a 4.0 GPA and 1600 on the SAT. Has that changed?
I dont know about the sat score, but at my high school advanced placement courses were weighted, so an A wasnt a 4.0, it was a 5.0, so if one were to take a few ap courses, theyre gpa could be higher than a 4.0
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  #13  
Old 11-11-2002, 06:25 PM
Peaches-n-Cream Peaches-n-Cream is offline
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You are so lucky, Chopper! Thanks for the clarification. I took AP classes, and all I got was college credit. At my school, we had number grades like 95 not letters. The 4.0 GPA didn't apply to me until college not that I had a 4.0 GPA.
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  #14  
Old 11-11-2002, 09:26 PM
poodleNtraining poodleNtraining is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by jonsagara
Absolutely. My chapter hands out two checks each quarter that cover the cost of tuition for the two most-active brothers.
WOW!!! That's very cool!!
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  #15  
Old 11-11-2002, 09:36 PM
KappaTarzan KappaTarzan is offline
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SAT only goes to 1600...

gpa here goes to 4, but i have heard of it going to 4.5 or 5
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