Zarot -- First I'll try to answer your question, then I'll make a comment about your spelling/grammar
First, I haven't found a way to know how many cadets are on a campus short of reading the Unit's website ( sometimes that size of the Battalion is mentioned), or phoning and asking the ROO (Recruiting Operations Officer) directly about the Battalion. Ask things like -- how many of the cadets are students at your host campus vs. students at Cross-town schools who commute?; How many of the first year cadets are on Scholarship vs. how many are not? What % of the non-scholarship cadets eventually earn an on-campus scholarship? and lastly, how many of the non-scholarship cadets make it through to Contract at the beginning of their Junior (MSIII) year?
As to how much scholarship money is available on a given campus, that is a two-step process. First, you need to earn a scholarship. Then, Cadet Command looks at your list of seven campuses listed on your Application to see, in order from #1 to #7, which of these Battalions has scholarship budget still available for a Scholarship awardee. It is true that generally, many more scholarships are available to be used at in-state Public universities than there are at Out-of-State Publics, or Private Universities. It's an issue of the in-State Public costing the Army on average about $10,000 in Tuition, vs. $25,000 in Tuition for Out of State Publics, vs. about $41,000 for Privates. The Army prefers to spend the majority of its tuition dollars on In-State Publics. That means that the Scholarship Award to Out of State Public needs to go to an especially strong Applicant, and the Scholarship Award to an expensive Private is reserved for truly exceptional Applicants...applicants that one might expect to also gain an appointment to the Academy given the right circumstances.
Second, the spelling/grammar. It would be good for you to start to understand that the Army is all about getting the details right. Spelling/grammar is part of that, even on a website, especially since you would like to be an Officer.
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Their is not the same as
they're or
there.
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Theirs is not the same as
there's
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University's is not the same as
Universities
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Percentile is not the same as
percentage
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Valid is not the same as
useful or
interesting
Those are very small things, but they stick out among a group of students who aspire to earn a Scholarship, and who aspire to become an Officer in a few years. If you haven't submitted your Scholarship Application yet, make sure that before you do, you carefully edit the essay and any other comments for errors like those I listed above... those errors are in your two posts.