paying for college financial aid overview
DESCRIPTION
Paying for College Financial Aid Overview. College Expenses. Tuition & Fees Room & Board Books & Supplies Transportation Miscellaneous Personal Expenses. What is Financial Aid. Scholarships Assistance Programs State Grants Federal Grants Federal Work Study Student Loans. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Paying for CollegeFinancial Aid Overview
College Expenses
• Tuition & Fees• Room & Board• Books & Supplies• Transportation• Miscellaneous Personal
Expenses
What is Financial Aid
• Scholarships• Assistance Programs• State Grants• Federal Grants• Federal Work Study• Student Loans
Where to Find Scholarships• Local businesses & organizations• Library• Colleges/Universities• Religious Organizations• Fraternal Organizations• Employers• Tribal Agencies• State Agencies• Large Corporations• Internet
Internet Addresses
• nddfs.org• fastweb.com• finaid.org• scholarships.com• collegenet.com• cashe.com• winscholarships.com
Assistance Programs
• ND Job Corps• Vocational Rehabilitation• Employee Assistance• Military Tuition Benefits• Tribal Higher Education • Individual Development Accounts
− ND Community Action Partnership− Call 701-232-2452 or visit www.capnd.org
State Grants
• Scholars Program• Indian Scholarship: $1,200• Academic or Career/Tech Ed
Scholarship: $1,500• State Student Incentive Grant:
$1,500
How much federal financial aid
will be awarded this year?
A. $156 millionB. $156 billionC. $156 trillion
FAFSAFree Application for Federal Student Aid
• Basic application for student aid• Collects student and family info• School determines financial aid• Completed online– fafsa.gov
FAFSA Tips
• Complete as soon as possible–By April 15 for best results
• Complete taxes 1 month prior• Follow up with financial aid office• Must do FAFSA each year
Frequent FAFSA Questions
• Who is a parent?• Who to include in household?• What assets to report?
FAFSA4caster.ed.gov
• Federal aid estimator• Any student of any age• Reminder to fill out the FAFSA• Won’t have to retype
How many FAFSAs are processed each year?
A. 1 millionB. 5 millionC. 14 million
Financial Aid Process
Apply to Schools
Complete FAFSA
Review SAR
Receive Award Letter
• Choose School
Sign MPN
Money sent to school
Federal Work Study
• Say “yes” on FAFSA• Jobs may be on or off campus• Eligible employers:– School–Agencies–Organizations
Federal Grants
• Pell Grant: –Up to $5,550
• FSEOG: –Up to $4,000
• TEACH Grant: –$4,000
Pell Grants2008-09 Pell Grant Recipients by Family Income
$20,000 or less
$20,001-$30,000
$30,001-$40,000
$40,001-$50,000
$50,000 or more
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40%
37%
24%
20%
11%
7%
Student Loans
• Federal Perkins• Federal Stafford• Federal PLUS• State DEAL Loan Program• Alternative Loans
Can all studentsget a loan?
Federal Stafford Loans
• Subsidized: –Government pays interest for
student while in-school, grace or deferment status
• Unsubsidized: –Government does not pay
interest for student; the interest is billed quarterly
Federal Stafford Loan Limits
Dependent Students• $5,500 – Year 1• $6,500 – Year 2• $7,500 – Years 3-5
Independent Students• $ 9,500 – Year 1• $10,500 – Year 2• $12,500 – Years 3-5• $20,500 – Graduates
Federal Stafford Loan Details
• Student is the borrower• Must be enrolled at least half-time• Sign Master Promissory Note (MPN)• Fixed interest rate (2012-13)–3.4% subsidized loans–6.8% unsubsidized loans
• 1% loan fee• Repayment begins after out of school
for 6 months
Federal PLUS Loan
• Loan in parent’s name• Parent responsible for repaying• Credit application required• Fixed rate = 7.9%• 4% loan fees•Repayment begins after 60 days •Must sign Master Promissory
Note (MPN)
State DEAL Loan
• Dakota Education Alternative Loan• FAFSA required• Low interest rate• Fixed or variable• No tiers
• Credit worthy cosigner if under 24• Deferment options
Alternative Loans
• Variable interest rates• Tiers based on credit• Cosigner may be required• Terms vary among lenders• Wells Fargo• Discover• Sallie Mae
What is the average student loan debt in North Dakota?
A. $25,000B. $35,000C. $45,000
How much should I borrow?
• 10% of anticipated gross income
• Example• $30,000 – Anticipated annual income • $2500 – Monthly income• $250 – Monthly student loan payment
Who Can Help
• High School Counselor• College Financial Aid Office• College Goal Sunday
800.554.2717banknd.nd.gov