Unless your father is
Mitt Romney or one of his wealthy friends, when you go to college you will
need financial aid. The
reason is simple, the cost of college is now astronomical. For example, here is a student getting ready
to go to Drexel University at a rather substantial
cost.
When Susan Romano
first read her son Zach’s financial aid letter from Drexel University, a
private college in Philadelphia, her eyes immediately jumped to the line
highlighted in yellow: “$13,442 expected payment” for the first year at the
$63,000-a-year school.
The above quote raises several issues. Why, for example, would anybody pay $63,000 a
year to go to Drexel
U. And why would somebody be excited about still
having a bill of $13,442.00 after financial aid. But those are not the questions to be raised
here. The question to be raised here is
what exactly do colleges call financial aid? (see answer for Drexel U. at the end of the post).
This is not an easy question to answer, and colleges
make it deliberately so.
The
format for packages varies by school, making it difficult to comparison shop:
Loans and grants offered by the federal government are lumped together with the
school’s scholarships, and the statements often don’t include information on
interest rates.
Yes, you are reading that correctly. Colleges regard loans as financial aid.
Salenia
Shaw, a high school senior Greenberg has been advising, was directed to a
website for details of her aid package from Bradley University in Peoria, Ill.
After subtracting grants from the cost to attend, they realized Shaw and her
mother would need to take out $17,000 in loans for the first year.
And here is another thing that happens.
A
letter from Butler University , a private college in Indianapolis where the total cost of
attending for the 2012-13 academic year comes to $47,168, initially appeared to
offer Jamrozik more money: The figure highlighted was $28,100. Yet after
crunching some numbers, he and his coach determined the family would actually
need to take out $28,000 in loans, more than double the amount for the state
school.
As for the colleges, well they are just trying to
help.
“It’s
certainly not our intention for them to be confusing,” says Melissa Smurdon,
director of financial aid at Butler .
“There is a significant amount of information that needs to be conveyed.” Lynn
Stichnote, director of student aid at Missouri S&T, acknowledges the
letters can be “intimidating.”
No, of course not. A
college would never want to be confusing, that’s why they lump student loans in
with what they call financial aid. Of
course, the aid is coming to the college, the students are just the ones left
with massive debts.
Oh, and what about that financial aid from Dexel U.
that left with student with only $13,442 a year that she had to come up with.
It
turned out the college’s “offered financial aid” included $42,000 in loans to
be taken out by the family. “A loan to me is not financial aid,” says Romano.
“It is money I have to pay.”
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