Friday, February 13, 2009
More Help with the FAFSA
VIDEO TUTORIAL
The Financial Aid staff at the University of California, Santa Barbara has designed a video tutorial on filling out the FAFSA called “Eight Easy Steps to the FAFSA: A Student's Guide to the Free Application for Federal Student Aid.” Because it is divided into eight segments, you can use all of it or just the segments for the sections of the FAFSA that are giving you trouble. Two people named Natalie and George go through the entire FAFSA line by line. They are a little too happy for my taste, but that might reflect my previous hours of struggling with the FAFSA.
Help from the FAFSA Itself
There’s a help button in the lower left-hand corner of every page of the FAFSA that you fill out online. This will give you help on the specific questions that are on that page, as well as links to FAQs and Customer Service.
The FAQ for the FAFSA says that it will take you less than an hour to fill it out. HA!!! It takes less than an hour IF you’ve already found all the information and filled in the worksheet they provide,which is basically a FAFSA that you can print. If you’re just copying answers from the paper to the web, then, yes, it can be done in less than an hour. Otherwise, allow more time, and DON’T wait until the day before the deadline for your state or college. That’s just asking for trouble.
Believe me, I know. The first FAFSA I ever filled out was done in the middle of the night the day before I thought it was due. Luckily, I was wrong and I had more time. Unluckily, I didn’t know that and my internet connection kept crashing. It was a rough night. By the way, if your internet connection crashes while you are doing your FAFSA on the Web, it will automatically save it and you will be able to access it in 45 minutes. (Of course, if you’re panicking because you think you’ve got just hours until it’s due, 45 minutes seems like a lifetime.)
Besides the FAQs, there is a link to “Web Customer Service Chat.” However, when I tried to access that, I got a screen that said that the following browsers had not been certified for use with Live help: Netscape Navigator (all platforms), AOL (Windows), Firefox (all platforms), Internet Explorer 7.x (Windows). Since I use Internet Explorer 7, I could not use it.
COMING SOON
“The Secrets of Financial Aid” – an ebook with all the secrets I’ve discovered in my comprehensive research of the subject. Make sure you’re on my email list, so you can get a copy as soon as it is released. Just fill in the boxes on the right hand site of this blog. Blessings,
Bonnie
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Fill Out the FAFSA!
The FAFSA is the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. Most financial aid, even that which comes from the states and the colleges, start with the FAFSA. Many college deadlines are in February and March, so time’s a wastin’. Financial aid is given on a FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED basis, so the quicker you get your FAFSA done and submitted, the better off you are.
With the economy tanking, more people than ever will be applying for financial aid, so there's even more competition than usual. Some states are cutting back their financial aid and many colleges are raising their tuition. More reasons to get going on the FAFSA.
Even if you are fortunate enough to have a job and make a decent living, you want to fill out the FAFSA. Many colleges are so expensive that even people making good money can qualify for financial aid. Also, if you're going to have to take out a loan, government loans have better interest rates and terms than private loans. The government will pay the interest on some federal loans while the student is in college, and repayment of some federal loans don’t begin until after the student graduates or stops going to college. You can't get a government loan for college without filling out the FAFSA.
So get going! The official FAFSA site is www.fafsa.ed.gov. Note that it is not a .com site. If you go to a .com site you may be asked to pay to have the FAFSA submitted.
If You Need Help
If you need help in completing the FAFSA, check out the government publication “Completing the FAFSA, 2009-2010”. This has an explanation for each question asked in the FAFSA. You can also call toll-free 1-800-433-3243 or TTY users (for the hearing impaired) can call 1-800-730-8913.
COMING SOON: “The Secrets of Financial Aid” – an ebook with all the secrets I’ve discovered in my comprehensive research of the subject. Make sure you’re on my email list, so you can get a copy as soon as it is released. Click here to sign up. You’ll also get a free copy of the ebook “A Parent’s Survival Guide to College” by insider Neil P. O’Donnell, academic advisor and professor at a private college in NY.
Blessings,Bonnie
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Increase Your College Financial Aid
Last time I told you I’d give you some ethical ways of increasing college financial aid and decreasing the EFC (Expected Family Contribution). I’ve been researching this and there are ways that I feel a Christian can do this without feeling that they are doing something unethical. This is somewhat like tax planning, which can also go both ways – some “tax planning” borders on illegal and can be definitely unethical. As Christians we want to steer clear of anything like that.
While, it would be financially positive for the EFC to pay the taxes before you fill out the FAFSA, don't let that be a reason that you put off completing the FAFSA. You don't want to miss a deadline or miss college-funded financial aid because they've run out. (See last blog.)
Blessings,
Bonnie
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Three College Financial Aid Secrets
In this blog I will tell you how to appeal your student's financial aid package(s). I will also share two more financial aid secrets.
Appealing Financial Aid Packages
If you believe that the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) doesn’t reflect your correct financial situation the first thing you need to do is include a letter with each college application. (The colleges probably won’t pay any attention to the letter when they are putting together your first financial aid offer, but you can refer to it when you appeal the financial aid packages.)
One reason the FAFSA might not reflect your financial situation could be large medical bills or some other expense that isn’t part of the FAFSA. Or your job situation might have changed since the last year, which is what the FAFSA is based upon. The colleges should take these things into account when they are putting together a financial aid package, but you can’t assume that the first financial aid package reflects these factors.
Appealing your financial aid package will mean that you will have more paperwork to do. You will have to send the colleges the evidence of whatever you’re claiming makes it impossible to pay the EFC (Expected Family Contribution). You may have to send them copies of your tax return too. And you will have to do this for each college you are considering.
When I was appealing my daughter Kat’s financial aid package, I sent huge packages full of copies of doctor bills and prescription receipts as well as tax returns to four colleges. By the time my daughter was applying to colleges my husband was ill with ALS, so we didn’t have an EFC of $20,000 to challenge, as we did with my son's first EFC. However, appealing Kat's financial aid packages did make a difference, especially in the kind of aid she received. (Grants vs loans) One college took the information we gave them and actually had the Federal Aid Office change our SAR (Student Aid Report) and EFC. Most deal with it internally.
Even if you don’t have huge medical bills or have lost your job, you may still find the EFC is more than you can afford. Most people in this situation aren’t poor, but they don’t have the extra funds that the EFC assumes. They are middle-class, hardworking people who have too much money to be considered economically disadvantaged, but not enough money to be able to write out a check for many thousands of dollars.
So challenge your EFC if it’s way out of line with what you can really afford. It doesn’t cost you more than time and postage, but it could make a difference of thousands of dollars in financial aid. It could also make a difference in whether your student receives scholarships and grants instead of loans.
FINANCIAL AID SECRET #2 - Be sure you get this information to them by the deadlines that they give you. In many cases being late is the same as not doing it at all.
FINANCIAL AID SECRET #3 - The earlier you get all financial aid information done, including the FAFSA, the better. The same goes for the college applicatons, because the financial aid that comes from each individual college (as opposed to state or federal aid) is given until it runs out. If you are one of the last ones to apply and get accepted, you may not get as much aid as you would have if you'd applied and gotten accepted earlier.
Blessings,
Bonnie