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By Gordon H. Wadsworth
Updated 8/6/2007
Economists predict the cost of attending
state colleges will soar to $120,000 by 2015. How can you cut
those costs? The following
steps can help students and parents avoid the student loan nightmare:
STEP ONE: The time to take advantage of available
college monies starts in the 7th or 8th
grade. Parents should begin preparing their students for college by
encouraging them to take the SAT or ACT along with a test prep class
to bolster results. With proper direction, even the average student
can score well on the national achievement tests and secure a place
in line for merit scholarships and grants. Check out the Princeton
Review web site at
Practice Test or log onto
Kaplan. For information about the ACT, go to
ACT at a glance for important details about the American College
Test, along with a free ACT prep test. There is also an ACT® prep
course available at
Prep Course, and a study guide at
Test Prep.
STEP
TWO: Most high school students are more interested in fashions,
sports, CDs or iPods than discussing Advanced Placement classes.
Yet, if students pass the AP test at the end of the course, they
automatically earn college credits. According to the College Board,
there are now 35 different AP classes covering 20 key subject areas.
High scores on Advanced Placement exams can save thousands of
dollars by enabling students to enter college with sophomore status.
See
AP Classes for more information “Students desiring to attend
college should enroll in all the honors and AP courses offered.
Parents should not compromise on this with their student. Students
who take advantage of the honors and AP courses offered at their
high school are more likely to succeed in college,” says Cecilia
Champion, Executive Director of Joanna
Cornerstone Ministries.
STEP
THREE: Test your knowledge. Just recently, a young student
told me he had earned 39 credit units by simply taking CLEP tests.
The College-Level Examination Program
at
CLEP, allows students to earn college credit for what
they already know.
STEP
FOUR: Students need to put together a spending plan. I have an
entire money management program outlined in The College Trap
including budget worksheets. The simplest way is to write down all
the funds available for college and compare that to the costs for
tuition, food, recreation, clothing, housing, transportation, books,
and so forth. The choice is simple. Either students manage their
money or it will manage them.
STEP FIVE: Avoid the credit card trap.
Robert Bugai, President of the New
Jersey based College Marketing Intelligence, notes that many
students fill out credit card applications as soon as they arrive on
campus. College bookstores often have a table set up with credit
card applications along with a choice of gifts. “The free gifts are
used as a hook to get students to apply,” Bugai says.
With so much credit available to students, it comes as
no surprise that many are in
financial trouble before graduation. Bugai also notes that it
is not uncommon for students to declare bankruptcy.
STEP SIX: Attend a local community college before transferring
to the “big name” university. “A
student could complete the first 2 years of a 4-year degree at a
fraction of the cost of a 4-year school,” said Rhonda Morgan,
associate professor of business administration at Gordon College in
Georgia. “Students who seek a “prestigious” college run an even
greater risk of piling up debt,” according to Paul Celuch,
co-founder of
CAPlus,
a Christian based firm in the Northeast.
Celuch feels that students should compare colleges, seek
professional counsel, and negotiate the final price. Using a
proprietary and historical database,
CAPlus
selects schools that
are at the same level academically and scholastically and gets them
to compete for the students.
STEP SEVEN: Shop around. Many students are now applying to
schools where their
national test scores, scholastic achievements, and grade point
average are well above the freshman average. “The trick is to find
a school that considers you a star,” wrote
Lucy Lazarony
at Bankrate.com. “Colleges are looking for the well-rounded
student, not just the top student academically,” added Cecilia
Champion. “Grades are important, but there are other factors in
ranking applicants including: Merit, Character, Leadership, and
Service.”
STEP EIGHT:
Consider a private college or university after 2 years at a
community college. Many private institutions have more scholarship
monies available with fewer restrictions. In addition, some private
schools avoid federal government mandates and are able to oppose
worldly campaigns and activities
This is by no means an
exhaustive list of steps. Other steps may include an
ROTC, distance education, students
may earn as much as $14,000
to $18,000 CO-OPs. 80 percent of the top Fortune 500
companies employ co-op students.
A college diploma can be one of
the most challenging 4 or 5 years in anyone’s life, but well worth
the investment of time, money and emotion. The key is to remain
free of the debt that is plaguing the country’s graduating seniors.
To do so requires discipline as well as creative planning.
A learned
author and radio personality, Larry Burkett, once told a caller to
his national broadcast, “It’s not how much money you have but how
you manage what you have.” By carefully managing every resource and
avoiding the college trap, students can earn a college diploma
without the massive debt associated with student loans.
The College Trap
offers creative ways to pay for college and stay out of debt and is
the first financial aid book to include hundreds of internet links
activated via an exclusive website. For more information, log onto
www.thecollegetrap.com.
For more information on the rising cost of Education see our article
on Education Inflation |
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