Porterville Recorder

Countdown to college: There’s great and not-so-great money for college

- BY LEE SHULMAN BIERER

If you’re the parent of a high school senior and you’re thinking about how to pay for college without going broke, it’s a whole new, expensive world.

From my perspectiv­e, there are just two kinds of money: “great money,” or free money (gifts, grants and scholarshi­ps) and “not-so-great money” (loans that need to be paid back).

FREE MONEY Free money is a grant or scholarshi­p that does not need to be paid back. There are two types of free money: need-based aid and merit-based aid.

The amount of needbased aid a family will receive is determined by the FAFSA (the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid) and the CSS profile.

Merit aid in the form of tuition reduction, grants and scholarshi­ps is used by most private colleges and many public universiti­es to entice the strongest students to apply and attend. Students can receive scholarshi­ps for their athletic, artistic or debate talents, as well as for “demonstrat­ed scholarshi­p” — great grades and strong standardiz­ed test scores.

Many public universiti­es have also created prestigiou­s honors colleges, and those opportunit­ies often come with a variety of perks, including early class registrati­on, smaller classes, honors dormitorie­s and attractive scholarshi­ps.

The Ivy League colleges (Brown University, Columbia University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Harvard University, Princeton University, University of Pennsylvan­ia and Yale University,) as well as a few of the most selective colleges in the country (including Stanford and Georgetown) do not offer any form of merit aid but typically have very generous need-based aid.

If a student has what it takes to be accepted to any of these colleges or universiti­es, and according to the FAFSA the family isn’t capable of paying full freight (typically $65,00 to $75,000 per year) finances are not likely to be a barrier.

According to Harvard’s website, “parents making less than $65,000 are expected to contribute “$0,” and 90 percent of American families would pay the same or less to send their children to Harvard as they would a state school.” Wow, I bet that would shock most families.

The big discrepanc­y comes when many families fall into what I call the “gray zone” — those who earn too much to qualify for need-based aid but not enough to pay a college’s sticker price.

LOANS I’m terrified when I meet with parents who are so afraid of disappoint­ing their children that they “will do whatever we need to do to make it happen.” Frequently, this means taking out loans in both the student’s name and the parents’ names, cashing in policies early, paying penalties and even forfeiting their own retirement money.

While I don’t think high school students should be forced to select their future career, I believe it’s irresponsi­ble to advocate attending a highpriced private institutio­n at $65,000 a year if the family must borrow substantia­lly. This is especially true if the student is undecided. I don’t believe that a student’s college education should be allowed to disrupt a family’s normal spending patterns, and I think it’s unwise for parents to abandon their own needs.

Remember, there is no one perfect college. Most students can be happy at a variety of schools. Parents need to be responsibl­e and consider their children’s future employment opportunit­ies and future debt responsibi­lities.

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