Does Harvard give full scholarships?

"Does anyone know any good site that will give good scholarships for Ivy league colleges like Harvard?"?

  • I really want to get a full scholarship that will pay most of my college does anyone know how to get that please tell me. It will be a huge help Thank you, =)

  • Answer:

    Sweet: Good news and bad - but the good news is so good, you won't care about the bad, I promise. We'll start with the bad: There are no academic scholarships to Ivy League schools. None. Zip. Nada. Not a single one. Every student who is accepted to an Ivy League school is - by definition - a brilliant student - there is no need, and no point to recognizing the best of those with a scholarship. So what's the good news? You won't need a scholarship. Every Ivy League school guarantees that they will provide 100% of financial aid need for every student they accept. If you can get IN to an Ivy League school, you won't need to worry about the cost. Once you are accepted, the school will ask you to complete both the FAFSA and an even more detailed aid application, on top of that. Combined, the two aid applications will tell your school everything they could ever want to know about your family finances, and your parents' ability to contribute to the cost of your education. The school will come up with a number that they believe you can pay, and the rest will be covered for you - 100%. At schools like Yale and Harvard, you and your parents will pay NOTHING if the combined household income is $60,000 or less. As the income increases, you'll be asked to pay up to 10% of the total household income. But that's it - in fact - here's something even better - the money they give you - it won't be loans. You'll have to work part-time and during the summers, but you won't have to take out any loans - no matter how much they give you. So - forget about scholarships - concentrate your efforts on getting ACCEPTED to any Ivy League school. The Harvards, Princetons and Yales of the world accept in the neighborhood of 7-10% of their applicants, and I'll warn you that plenty of applicants with 4.0 GPAs and very high SAT/ACT scores are rejected every year. Good luck to you.

Sweetpri... at Yahoo! Answers Visit the source

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