Negotiating Merit Aid Forum

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Chuch

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Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Chuch » Wed Jul 15, 2009 1:59 am

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STATISTICS

Graphs based on index averaged from all published t14 indexes. To calculate your index take LSAT+(GPA*15.101). Major outliers are assumed to be cancer curers or non-reported URMs (or both). Additionally, figures represent only reported offers, which is often a first offer refused by a withdrawing candidate who made no attempt to have that figure raised. Thank you to YCrevolution for help with the average index!
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Following summary graph provided by jackassjim. many thanks!
Use the schools above number (1-22) for reference.
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GRAPHS FOR URMs:

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GRAPHS FOR SPLITTERS:
Includes only those applicants with one number at or above the schools 75th percentile and the other at or below their 25th percentile who reported receiving merit aid offers. The more data points a school has, the more splitter friendly that school was last cycle. Calculate your INDEX by adding your LSAT score to your GPA*15.101. Go to the graphs that fit your splitterness to see how much money, if any, to shoot for.

HIGH LSAT/LOW GPA SPLITTERS:

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HIGH GPA/LOW LSAT SPLITTERS:

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Last edited by Chuch on Wed Dec 02, 2009 11:19 am, edited 28 times in total.

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Ken

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Ken » Wed Jul 15, 2009 11:54 am

Thanks for the excellent submission. The question of how to negotiate merit aid offers and scholarships is frequently asked and your article will surely be a resource to address this FAQ. Great article!

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Katerina

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Katerina » Wed Jul 15, 2009 12:09 pm

This is amazing! Do you have any suggestions for how to identify a splitter's position? I am a 3.2/171 so for most of my "target" schools, I am above median LSAT and below median GPA.

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Aeroplane

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Aeroplane » Wed Jul 15, 2009 12:14 pm

Katerina wrote:This is amazing! Do you have any suggestions for how to identify a splitter's position? I am a 3.2/171 so for most of my "target" schools, I am above median LSAT and below median GPA.
I really think splitter treatment depends on the school and is somewhat unpredictable. I had a 3.1/174 and received merit aid from Michigan, Cornell, and GULC but none from Penn and Northwestern. There are a number of splitters w/merit aid from Michigan on LSN.

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Chuch

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Chuch » Wed Jul 15, 2009 12:43 pm

Aeroplane wrote:I really think splitter treatment depends on the school
this is definitely true as merit aid in general depends on the school and the cycle, and many non-splitter, above median applicants have noted inconsistencies in merit offers from peer schools. i would assume that the level of predictability decreases as your numbers separate and it becomes harder to identify where you stand relative to a school's median. additionally, variance of competing offers within their respective tiers will probably increase as peer schools attempt to balance their incoming classes; in other words, if a school notices a trend in deposited students that favors one number over the other (gpa/lsat), they would probably be friendlier to splitters whose number set could help balance that discrepancy. schools looking to increase their average incoming lsat could be expected to offer you more than those looking to increase their average incoming gpa. that would entirely depend on the cycle rather than the institution.
Last edited by Chuch on Sat Jul 18, 2009 12:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Ken

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Ken » Wed Jul 15, 2009 12:50 pm

Thanks Chuch, your excellent article is already helping TLSers.

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lawlover829

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by lawlover829 » Wed Jul 15, 2009 12:56 pm

Ken wrote:Thanks Chuch, your excellent article is already helping TLSers.
+1 thanks!!

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Aeroplane

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Aeroplane » Wed Jul 15, 2009 12:57 pm

if any splitters have experience successfully negotiating merit aid and have some insight to offer
This is how my negotiations went:

GULC - received no offer. Inquired about merit aid with no mention of other offers and received $5K/yr scholarship. A couple days before the scholarship acceptance deadline I received an unsolicited email upping it to $10K/yr.
Michigan - received $15K/yr offer. Requested an increase w/no leverage. Denied.
Cornell - received $10K/yr offer. Showed then Michigan's offer and received increase to $15K/yr. I politely pointed out that Michigan would have a significantly lower COA with equivalent scholarships. They didn't budge.
Northwestern - no offer. Inquired about merit aid. Denied, but told to wait until first round of scholarship acceptance deadlines passed. Asked to submit offer letters from UM & Cornell which I did. Denied again.
Penn - got in off Hold, in late April. Inquired about merit aid. They asked for pdf's of my UM offer letter, I sent. Denied.

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rondemarino

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by rondemarino » Wed Jul 15, 2009 1:01 pm

tagged
Aeroplane wrote:
Katerina wrote:This is amazing! Do you have any suggestions for how to identify a splitter's position? I am a 3.2/171 so for most of my "target" schools, I am above median LSAT and below median GPA.
I really think splitter treatment depends on the school and is somewhat unpredictable. I had a 3.1/174 and received merit aid from Michigan, Cornell, and GULC but none from Penn and Northwestern. There are a number of splitters w/merit aid from Michigan on LSN.
Michigan is close to being my top choice (Duke/NU my other top choices) because of their summer-start (in addition to, you know, being a good school). I'm not going to ED because $65k/year is a way too much to take on in loans (esp. @ 8.5%). If I can get my firm to shovel me 5-10 hours of patent prosecution work during the year (no overhead and my low billing rate should be attractive), then I'd commit to Michigan the second they hit $15k/yr in scholarship money (which would keep my in Stafford Loan territory for the three years).

Assuming I'm lucky enough to get an acceptance, can I actually be this direct? At $15k/yr, I'm attending (no ifs or buts)?

EDIT: grammar fixes

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by sbalive » Wed Jul 15, 2009 1:05 pm

I think it should be added to the top of the article - APPLY BROADLY.

Everyone always says to select a "few" reaches and targets. But, especially if you can get fee waivers, it's worth the investment (only $12/app with a waiver) to get as much leverage as possible. So, even if a school might not be in a region where you want to practice, or even if it's a T14 you wouldn't want to attend due to location (like Michigan or Cornell), it's still worth applying and taking the time to write supplemental essays, etc. It's worth it for potentially $10-20K more.

As for negotiation style, do you really have to worry too much about how you phrase it? I didn't do that much negotiation, but I was successful just saying "I really want to go to this school but I'd like you to please consider other offers of $X from School Y and, etc." and I just emailed them scanned copies of award letters.

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Aeroplane

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Aeroplane » Wed Jul 15, 2009 1:14 pm

rondemarino wrote:tagged
Aeroplane wrote:
Katerina wrote:This is amazing! Do you have any suggestions for how to identify a splitter's position? I am a 3.2/171 so for most of my "target" schools, I am above median LSAT and below median GPA.
I really think splitter treatment depends on the school and is somewhat unpredictable. I had a 3.1/174 and received merit aid from Michigan, Cornell, and GULC but none from Penn and Northwestern. There are a number of splitters w/merit aid from Michigan on LSN.
Michigan is close to being my top choice (Duke/NU my other top choices) because of their summer-start (in addition to, you know, being a good school). I'm not going to ED because $65k/year is a way too much to take on in loans (esp. @ 8.5%). If I can get my firm to shovel me 5-10 hours of patent prosecution work during the year (no overhead and my low billing rate should be attractive), then I'd commit to Michigan the second they hit $15k/yr in scholarship money (which would keep my in Stafford Loan territory for the three years).

Assuming I'm lucky enough to get an acceptance, can I actually be this direct? At $15k/yr, I'm attending (no ifs or buts)?

EDIT: grammar fixes
Don't lowball yourself at $15K/yr. That's what I got with worse numbers, and IIRC an "easier" engineering major. Let them send the initial offer.

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Chuch

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Chuch » Wed Jul 15, 2009 1:27 pm

Aeroplane wrote:This is how my negotiations went
that was a great (albeit condensed) example of how the negotiation process might go for applicants at every level.
rondemarino wrote: Assuming I'm lucky enough to get an acceptance, can I actually be this direct? At $15k/yr, I'm attending (no ifs or buts)?
you can still be that direct without sounding quite as entitled. personally, i wouldn't name an exact figure or include the ultimatum, but there certainly isn't anything wrong with emailing to discuss your financial situation as it relates to the viability of your matriculation.
sbalive wrote:I think it should be added to the top of the article - APPLY BROADLY.

As for negotiation style, do you really have to worry too much about how you phrase it? I didn't do that much negotiation, but I was successful just saying "I really want to go to this school but I'd like you to please consider other offers of $X from School Y and, etc." and I just emailed them scanned copies of award letters.
good advice. applying to more schools increases your chance at picking up those valuable negotiating chips outlined above. you really can't have too many options.
it actually sounds like you phrased your aid-related correspondences quite well, and, even if it didn't feel like it at the time, emailing them copies of competing award letters is a great example of the negotiation i talked about in the article. the assumption is that they often base their offers off of the existence and amount of competing offers rather than just offering a scholarship to everyone who deserves one.

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rondemarino

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by rondemarino » Wed Jul 15, 2009 1:30 pm

Aeroplane wrote:Don't lowball yourself at $15K/yr. That's what I got with worse numbers, and IIRC an "easier" engineering major. Let them send the initial offer.
I'll do the happy dance in the middle of the street if this turns out to be true :D

I guess I wasn't terribly precise in my post, but I meant giving them a number after the initial offer. Is naming my price after their first offer a good idea?

TO Chuch: I don't feel entitled, so I'm really not hoping to sound entitled (but its something I'll now make an effort to look for, in case I come off that way). MY estimates are based on my financial situation only, and nothing else.

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Chuch

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Chuch » Wed Jul 15, 2009 2:33 pm

rondemarino wrote: TO Chuch: I don't feel entitled, so I'm really not hoping to sound entitled (but its something I'll now make an effort to look for, in case I come off that way). MY estimates are based on my financial situation only, and nothing else.

didn't mean to suggest that you felt entitled, but naming your price in an ultimatum has the potential to rub an adcomm the wrong way. i'd stick with the tactics aeroplane outlined where simply asking them to make their offer more competitive with those of their peers is your go-to counter.

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Chuch

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Chuch » Thu Jul 16, 2009 4:05 pm

added stats for the t14. let me know other schools people would like to see stats for. urm stats will follow for all school with sufficient sample sizes.

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by LSATfromNC » Thu Jul 16, 2009 4:09 pm

Chuch wrote:added stats for the t14. let me know other schools people would like to see stats for. urm stats will follow for all school with sufficient sample sizes.

14-25 :)

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Chuch

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Chuch » Thu Jul 16, 2009 4:18 pm

LSATfromNC wrote:
Chuch wrote:added stats for the t14. let me know other schools people would like to see stats for. urm stats will follow for all school with sufficient sample sizes.

14-25 :)
on the way. should be up by tomorrow.

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jackassjim

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid (now with $ statistics)

Post by jackassjim » Thu Jul 16, 2009 4:20 pm

That's really great. Thanks for being thorough and including both mean and median, as well as the SD. This is really informative!

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Chuch

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid

Post by Chuch » Thu Jul 16, 2009 11:04 pm

LSATfromNC wrote:
Chuch wrote:added stats for the t14. let me know other schools people would like to see stats for. urm stats will follow for all school with sufficient sample sizes.

14-25 :)
done. go get that $$$.

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Ken

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid (updated with t25 $ statistics)

Post by Ken » Thu Jul 16, 2009 11:14 pm

Way to make a very good article to become great. I appreciate your taking the feedback from others and incorporating it into expanding the article.

I did not see information on HYS, is that available? Cheers,

Ken

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid (updated with t25 $ statistics)

Post by Yimbeezy » Thu Jul 16, 2009 11:16 pm

Could someone with more excel skillz than I graph those out? Perhaps by the ranking groupings further up in the text?

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid (updated with t25 $ statistics)

Post by jackassjim » Fri Jul 17, 2009 12:26 pm

Yimbeezy wrote:Could someone with more excel skillz than I graph those out?
Ask and you shall receive.
  • # School (Sample Size)
    1 Columbia: (70)
    2 NYU: (80)
    3 Chicago: (98)
    4 Michigan: (100)
    5 Virginia: (100)
    6 Penn: (38)
    7 Berkeley: (19)
    8 Northwestern: (55)
    9 Cornell: (38)
    10 Duke: (100)
    11 Georgetown: (72)
    12 Vanderbilt: (126)
    13 Texas: (131)
    14 UCLA: (79)
    15 USC: (78)
    16 Washington U (MO): (164)
    17 Boston University: (86)
    18 Emory: (96)
    19 Minnesota: (71)
    20 Indiana Bloomington: (109)
    21 Illinois: (156)
    22 Notre Dame: (93)

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jackassjim

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid (updated with t25 $ statistics)

Post by jackassjim » Fri Jul 17, 2009 1:28 pm

Your data for Michigan and Virginia are incomplete. Sample size should be considerably bigger.

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Chuch

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid (updated with t25 $ statistics)

Post by Chuch » Fri Jul 17, 2009 1:30 pm

jackassjim wrote:Your data for Michigan and Virginia are incomplete. Sample size should be considerably bigger.
yeah. i only grabbed first page of search results (hence the even 100). i'm working on updating it now.

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Re: Negotiating Merit Aid (updated with t25 $ statistics)

Post by jackassjim » Fri Jul 17, 2009 1:37 pm

Chuch wrote:
jackassjim wrote:Your data for Michigan and Virginia are incomplete. Sample size should be considerably bigger.
yeah. i only grabbed first page of search results (hence the even 100). i'm working on updating it now.
The difference is really not that huge:

Yours:
  • Michigan: (100)
    LSAT: 171.77 / 171 / 2.96
    GPA: 3.705 / 3.74 / .23
    $: 52,290.67 / 45,000.00 / 33,735.84
Mine:
  • > mean(michigan$money)
    [1] 56360.12
    > mean(michigan$LSAT)
    [1] 171.5522
    > mean(michigan$GPA)
    [1] 3.736418
    > median(michigan$LSAT)
    [1] 171
    > median(michigan$GPA)
    [1] 3.78
    > median(michigan$money)
    [1] 45000
    >

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