2013년 12월 1일 일요일

About 'chicago university financial aid'|Profiles in the Financial Aid Profession: Anne Walker, Rice University







About 'chicago university financial aid'|Profiles in the Financial Aid Profession: Anne Walker, Rice University








Student               financial               aid               is               the               key               to               a               college               education               for               anyone               who               lacks               the               personal               savings,               parental               funds,               or               scholarship               offers               to               attend               institutions               of               higher               learning.

In               the               wake               of               recent               economic               downturns,               college               savings               account               holders               that               relied               heavily               on               invested               funds               virtually               overnight               took               hits               that               sometimes               cut               down               as               much               as               half               of               the               funds               contained               therein.

The               Van               Cougar,               published               by               Washington               State               University,               is               not               putting               any               lipstick               on               this               pig               either.

It               is               already               well               known               that               tuition               costs               are               on               the               rise               and               woefully               out               of               step               with               cost               of               living               increases               in               salaries               of               parents,               yet               when               combining               this               already               established               fact               with               the               sudden               losses               of               education               savings               accounts,               the               projected               reliance               on               financial               aid               is               going               to               increase               drastically.
               Quoting               the               Chicago               Tribune,               the               United               States               Student               Association               demonstrates               that               the               dramatic               rise               of               in-state               tuition               by               6.6%               in               one               year               has               not               been               matched               by               financial               aid               funds;               as               a               matter               of               fact,               fees               and               costs               historically               covered               by               student               aid               are               actually               beginning               to               be               excluded               from               financial               aid               disbursements,               and               in               addition               to               paying               for               an               increased               cost               of               living,               students               and               their               parents               now               also               have               to               pony               up               funds               for               sundry               charges.
               The               fork               in               the               road               is               obvious:               on               the               one               hand,               the               tightening               budgets               and               drying               funding               for               federal               student               aid               may               lead               to               more               competition               when               it               comes               to               obtaining               student               loans.

This               will               leave               some               students               without               the               funding               they               need               to               attend               college               or               to               continue               in               their               education.
               On               the               other               hand,               the               personal               loan               market               is               actively               marketing               to               students               and               their               parents               to               apply               to               them               for               funding               to               cover               educational               expenses.

While               at               face               value               this               looks               like               a               good               option,               the               problem               with               these               non               federally               or               state               funded               loan               products               comes               into               play               when               it               is               time               for               repayment:               neither               regulated               nor               playing               by               the               same               rules,               the               interest               rates               may               be               higher,               forbearances               may               be               nonexistent,               and               the               potential               for               default               and               adverse               credit               ratings               for               recent               college               grads               is               sky               high.
               As               though               this               were               not               sufficient               to               send               any               hopeful               student               over               the               edge,               consider               the               brewing               California,               Colorado,               Arizona,               Georgia,               Oklahoma               and               South               as               well               as               North               Carolina               battles               over               illegal               immigration               and               college               attendance.

In               a               sympathetic               piece               that               discounts               the               fiscal               impact               of               permitting               individuals               in               the               US               illegally               to               attend               college               at               in-state               tuition               prices,               USA               Today               paints               a               picture               from               the               students'               point               of               view               that               is               hard               to               discount.
               Unfortunately,               the               reality               in               the               current               economic               climate               belies               the               sentiment               of               not               punishing               youngsters               for               their               parents'               sins:               already               in               the               public               schools               children               of               citizens               are               competing               for               classroom               space               and               funding               with               children               of               those               who               snuck               in.
               Although               I               am               a               firm               believer               in               educating               each               child,               the               cutoff               date               for               taking               responsibility               for               a               child's               education               should               be               the               18th               birthday.

Continuing               to               shepherd               the               young               adults               through               their               college               education               delays               a               problem               that               will               have               to               be               faced               sooner               or               later:               what               will               the               new               college               grads               -               who               are               illegally               in               the               US               -               do               with               their               college               degrees?
               Not               permitted               to               work               (legally)               yet               weighed               down               with               college               loans               that               may               have               been               obtained               from               less               than               favorable               sources,               are               we               not               condemning               another               generation               to               almost               indentured               servitude,               working               under               the               table               for               pennies               on               the               dollar?
               Sources:
               http://www.vancouver.wsu.edu/ss/vancougar/index.php?page=viewstory&story=682;               http://www.usstudents.org/press-room/articles/october-2007/college-costs-rising-ahead-of-inflation;               http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2008-07-06-Illegaled_N.htm






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