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PAYING FOR COLLEGE GRASP Presentation Chesterfield County Public Library Kathy Davis, GRASP advisor
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What is GRASP? GRASP is a non-profit organization that helps students and their families find the financial resources needed for the student to continue his or her education after high school. GRASP financial aid advisors are available in every high school in the Richmond metro area and their services are provided free of charge. to add text
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Get Ready! You are now starting a race on two parallel tracks One is the Admissions Track One is the Financial Track The two will intersect when your student is accepted Each have their own deadlines, their own forms, their own language add text
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Where Do I Start? Target in Mind Reality Check Family Philosophy Available Resources Protection Plan
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It’s Like Buying a Car... Sticker Price = $20,000 Savings = $10,000 Gap = $10,000 When is the last time you paid sticker price for your car? text
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The Sticker Price: Private Schools (Ferrari)* State Schools (Mercedes Benz)** Community College (Smart Car)*** Tuition and Fees$44,210$6,700 - $13,132$3,620 Room and Board$9,760$7,927 - $8,772NA Books, supplies, etc.$2,100$4,124 - $2,950$800 Total per year$56,070$18,751 - $24,854$4,420 Total for degree$224,280$75,004 - $99,416$8,840 Source: College Board *Private school numbers are for University of Richmond, Fall 2012 **State school range includes Norfolk State University, Fall 2011 (low end) and William and Mary, Fall 2011 (high end) ***Community College numbers are for John Tyler Community College, Fall 2011
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The Impact of Financial Aid VCUUniversity of Richmond Percent of freshmen receiving financial aid75%68% Average financial aid package$10, 823$39,389 Scholarships/loans43%/57%84%/16% Sticker price$22,201$56,070 Avg. price paid by students receiving financial aid$11, 378$16,681 2010 grads with debt61%42% Average debt$25,151$23,070 Sources: College Board, USNews
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Schools are Big Business Over 90% of the money students receive comes through the schools They compete for the students they want They compete for resources from the states and other funding sources Federal government decisions impact them
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Ways to Pay the Bill Free Money – grants and scholarships Need vs. Merit Programs Special Programs – Work study; Tuition Adjustments Loans Stafford Loans Plus Loans Your Own Money (OOP)k to add text
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FAFSA-Gateway to Financial Aid Free Application for Federal Student Aid Must file each year (as close to Jan. 1 as possible) Required for almost every type of aid, including merit Family structure – who reports what Numbers In; Numbers Out Appeals & Special Circumstances CSS Profile spreading to state schools add text
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Definition of Financial Need College’s Cost of Attendance (COA) Minus FAFSA Expected Family Contribution (EFC) ________________________________ = Your Financial Need to add text
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What you should know about the EFC Income counts more than assets Number of children in college is a factor Parent age has an impact Pulling money from retirement to pay college costs could cause your EFC to rise in the following year A change in circumstances can impact the aid decision text
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What I Can Do Today Set expectations with your student Decide how much you want to cover Take an inventory of current resources Run the FAFSA Forecaster Review your plan of protection Educate yourself
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Resources www.grasp4virginia.com Your high school GRASP advisor University financial aid offices and websites Other websites www.fafsa.ed.gov www.fafsa4caster.ed.gov www.collegeboard.com http://www.usnews.com/education/best-colleges/paying-for-college
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