Nice! You said she was getting letters after her psat, remind me what she got on that. Boy just took it.
My boy just got his score on the freshman run of the PSAT. His high school has freshmen take it as a run before the "real" one as a sophomore.
They've changed the scoring in just the few years since my girls took it, but he got a 1400, which appears to be pretty strong. From what I can tell, it appears much better than either of my girls did on the PSAT, neither of which sniffed national merit. One of them ended up with a 33 ACT and the other a 1540 SAT, so hopefully his PSAT indicates good things.
Having been around this rodeo a couple times now...the only thing I'll caution, and I've already mentioned this to Russ, for anyone in this situation with their kids, keep a very level head and set very reasonable expectations with kids. The decision making around these college admissions is largely inscrutable at times. I always get nervous about kids getting "set" on elite schools...not because they aren't good enough, but there's no such thing as "good enough". At the highest levels, EVERYONE is good enough, and the selection process is always, from the outside, awfully capricious. In other words, there is a significant element that is outside your kids' or your control.
My oldest got a full tuition scholarship to Alabama (not full ride, but $0 tuition) with her grades and 33 ACT. Appalachian State didn't offer her a dime, literally not a dime of aid, or consideration to any of their scholarships.
My second, with a 1540 SAT, got rejected outright by Tulane and Vandy. She got offered a generous and significant scholarship from University of Pittsburgh, an ok scholarship at Clemson (but $15k off a $55k nut annually wasn't going to make it any more doable), and not a cent from NC State.
It happened to my oldest in graduate school. She got admitted to a top ten program for her degree at Rush Medical School in Chicago, and rejected to a top nothing program at Georgia State.
However competitive you think it is to get into first and second tier schools, or to get merit aid...it's tougher. There's just no way of really wrapping your head around who's going to accept them, and even less about who's going to give them any money at all. With the exception of third or fourth tier schools, and a few of the public flagships in the south (Alabama, Ole Miss, LSU) merit money is very hard to land.