Saturday, March 10, 2012

HOT SCHOLARSHIP NEWS! 800 U.S. colleges awarded money to international students in 2010

Ace! NewsFlash 

For international students, studying in the United States can be a pricey endeavor. Many U.S. colleges are expensive, cash-strapped, and in demand. And unlike their American peers, international students typically don't qualify for federal loans to help them fund their education.

[Read more about international student trends.]

But while financial aid for international students tends to be very scarce, it does exist. At least 776 colleges offered some amount of financial aid to undergraduate international students for the 2010-2011 school year, according to school-reported data to U.S. News. The average award packages ranged from several hundred dollars to tens of thousands, with the highest average packages topping $50,000.

The list below includes the 10 ranked schools that awarded the highest average financial aid packages to undergraduate international students for the 2010-2011 school year. Those schools enrolled varying numbers of students from abroad, but all awarded, on average, $47,469 or more.

[See which universities enroll the most international students.]

Yale University tops the list of schools that offer the most generous average aid packages to undergraduate international students, reporting that the average award in 2010-2011 was $51,044. Like Yale, all the universities on the list below are private schools. Many are national liberal arts colleges, which means they focus on undergraduate education and grant at least half of all degrees in liberal arts majors, such as English, humanities, and philosophy. Nearly all are located in the northeastern United States, in states including Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New York.

Keep in mind that these statistics aren't a guarantee of financial aid at a certain school. Since these awards are averaged over the number of international undergraduates enrolled, it's possible that some students may have received much more money than their international peers at the same school. In addition, schools that are designated by U.S. News as Unranked, meaning they did not meet certain criteria required by U.S. News to be numerically ranked, were not eligible to be on this list.

These 10 schools awarded the highest average aid packages to undergraduate international students for the 2010-2011 school year:

Yale University (CT)$51,0443483, National Universities
Wesleyan University (CT)$50,7438412, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Skidmore College (NY)$50,0005649, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Amherst College (MA)$49,0101462, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Trinity College (CT)$48,99911937, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Gettysburg College (PA)$48,9084347, National Liberal Arts Colleges
University of Chicago$48,436635, National Universities
Williams College (MA)$47,7131281, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Vassar College (NY)$47,62312214, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Colby College (ME)$47,4699421, National Liberal Arts Colleges



chicagotribune.com

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