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Saturday, November 27, 2010

USA- International Scholarships for Undergraduate Students at Colby-Sawyer College 2011-2012

Colby-Sawyer College, USA encourage undergraduate International students to compete for need-based and merit-based financial aid scholarships and a variety of awards that acknowledge students who have reached a high level of academic achievement throughout their high school career, for 2011-2012 academic year. With the exception of the Wesson Honors Scholarship, there is neither a separate application, nor deadline for these scholarships.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Tuck School of Business Scholarships 2011-2012 in MBA- USA

Tuck School of Business Scholarships 2011-12 for US and International Citizens to finance their MBA.
Tuck has a need-blind admissions policy, which means admission is offered to the most qualified candidates without regard to their financial circumstances. Tuck's goal is to provide financial assistance to students who lack sufficient personal resources to finance their MBA education.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Need-Based Financial Aid at Harvard College/University for international Students

The Harvard College offers Need-Based Financial Aid and Need-Blind admission to all students-including international students- who demonstrate financial need. All of Harvard's financial aid is awarded on the basis of demonstrated financial need-there are no academic, athletic or merit-based awards, and the full need of every student is met, including international students, for all four years.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Need-blind admission in USA for International Students

What is Need-Blind Admission?

Need-blind admission is a college/university admission policy in which the financial situation of the applicant (student) is not considered when deciding admission. That is the students inability to pay the required full fees will not determine his admission acceptance or rejection. For instance, if a student qualifies for admission and is evaluated to have finance needs and cannot afford the school fees of $30,000, the school may decide that the student pays $600, with the remaining $24,000 waived as financial aid or in some cases a full scholarship.