Admissions is need-blind for U.S.
citizens, U.S. permanent residents, Canadian citizens and persons
granted refugee visas by the United States. This means that applications
are reviewed without regard to whether students are able to pay for the
total cost of attending Columbia.
SEAS
is committed to meeting the full need of all applicants admitted as
first-year students. Certain limitations apply, however, in the case of
transfer students. Although transfer admission is need-blind, financial
aid resources for transfer students are limited. Therefore SEAS is
unable to meet the full need of transfer applicants, with the exception
of students who enter the Combined Plan Program and those who transfer
from Columbia College.
The
Combined Plan Program for undergraduates offers students from
affiliated schools across the country the opportunity to earn both a
B.A. in a liberal arts field from their home institutions and a B.S. in
engineering from SEAS in five years.
SEAS
assesses the information applicants provided to the Office of Financial
Aid and Educational Financing to determine how much a family is
expected to contribute to college costs. The resulting "family
contribution" will include both a "parental contribution" and a "student
contribution". If the calculated family contribution is less than the
cost of attendance, aid is awarded to make up the difference.
Only
students who demonstrate financial need are eligible for financial aid.
Except for the unsubsidized Federal Stafford Loan, all institutional
and federal aid is need-based. The financial aid package may contain a
combination of Federal Stafford Loans, Federal Work-Study, and Federal
Perkins Loans.
There
are no academic, athletic, or talent-based institutional scholarships.
While Columbia students are often the recipients of merit-based
scholarships from outside organizations, nothing merit-based is offered
directly from the school.
Foreign
students should note that the admissions process is need-blind only for
U.S. citizens, U.S. permanents resident, Canadian, and persons granted
refugee visas by the United States. At this time, financial aid for
foreign students who do not fall into one of these categories at SEAS is
very limited. However, each year several foreign aid students are
admitted to Columbia with a financial aid package that covers
one-hundred percent of educational expenses. Because the SEAS community
is so small, foreign applicants who need financial aid must be
considered on a case-by-case basis; candidates should be aware that such
awards may not be possible every year.
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