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This is a topic I've been wondering about myself.
If a student establishes residency by having an address, drivers license and so on... Does that preclude a parent from actually paying for the tuition? In other words, would the school require the student to be totally independent and self-sufficient and able to prove it?

_______________________
"People ask me what I do in winter when there's no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring." Rogers Hornsby, Hall of Famer

Many students, not just scholarship students take up residency when attending out of state. Tr is correct you need to check with the school, but most require one year residency off campus. I have many friends who have gone that route, it is most helpful when paying back the loans.
My son was given an out of state tuition waiver by a school in Nebraska. (he turned it down later to attend another school). There were no residency requirements involved - it was some sort of state school thing intended to lure talented young people into the state in hopes they would stay after graduation.

There was a minimum ACT score required and a few other details. I would not be surprised others states might ahave something similar.

The one detail I can't over stress is that you really need to talk to the financial aid departments at the schools you are interested in. Do not depend on the coach to know all of the possible aid available (some do - some dont'). Go to the source - it may pay off.
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AParent
Our son was also waived out of state tuition, based on test scores/GPA. It is available to all students.

I don't think athletes can be treated diffently than anyone else regarding tuition. The out-of-state waiver frees up additional additional scholarship $$, as scholly money used for out of state tuition, uses up additional scholarship units, compared to in-state, according to the coach.
Dad04

That is correct, it was available to all students - not just athletes.

These types of scholarships are the ones the coaches are most likely to be unaware of. All the more reason I have always suggested going to see the finanacial aid folks early in your recruiting process.

If the coach is on his toes all you have wasted is a few hours of your time. If not, you might find a golden egg on your doorstep (gold plated no doubt).
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If OOS tuition was waived for a BB player it would be considered a countable grant under the NCAA. You would be surprised what the NCAA refers to as a benefit to an athlete that is prohibited.

My son had a Soc Sec # and a SC licence and was not able to get a waiver . I know others who were able to in other states so the rules must vary from state to state and possibly level of BB.
quote:
Originally posted by BobbleheadDoll:
If OOS tuition was waived for a BB player it would be considered a countable grant under the NCAA.


That is not true. If the OOS tuition was waived for academic reasons, and the school makes this available to all students with the same academic criteria, it would not be countable against the 11.7 scholarships. It would be treated the same as qualified academic aid, which it is.
quote:
If the OOS tuition was waived for academic reasons, and the school makes this available to all students with the same academic criteria, it would not be countable against the 11.7 scholarships. It would be treated the same as qualified academic aid, which it is.


True...assuming it meets the NCAA criteria for blending academic $

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