From a parent writing big checks every semester:
It's hard not to have a "sour grapes" mentality when you hear stories like this; however, I don't think this situation is really all that typical. I hear more often: "My husband hasn't worked in three years, I work only part-time, and still all we were offered is loans". I don't know why some people seem to get good offers, while others whose situations don't look all that different get nothing.
Don't overlook the other side of that coin though: The parents of this boy you're describing may not have any real responsibility in paying for his education . . . but I wouldn't trade places with them. They have no financial stability.
Also, I was a kid from a family who couldn't pay anything, and I did receive the maximum Pell grant back in the 80s. It didn't pay everything, so I worked my tail off rather than take out loans. But in the 24 years since I graduated, I've worked steadily and have paid many, many times the amount of that Pell grant in taxes to the government. They "won" by helping me through school. Hopefully this boy you know will go on to do the same thing.
I completely agree that the financial aid process is unfair, but -- given that everyone's situations are so different and so many people are willing to cheat -- I don't know how to make it fair.
It's hard not to have a "sour grapes" mentality when you hear stories like this; however, I don't think this situation is really all that typical. I hear more often: "My husband hasn't worked in three years, I work only part-time, and still all we were offered is loans". I don't know why some people seem to get good offers, while others whose situations don't look all that different get nothing.
Don't overlook the other side of that coin though: The parents of this boy you're describing may not have any real responsibility in paying for his education . . . but I wouldn't trade places with them. They have no financial stability.
Also, I was a kid from a family who couldn't pay anything, and I did receive the maximum Pell grant back in the 80s. It didn't pay everything, so I worked my tail off rather than take out loans. But in the 24 years since I graduated, I've worked steadily and have paid many, many times the amount of that Pell grant in taxes to the government. They "won" by helping me through school. Hopefully this boy you know will go on to do the same thing.
I completely agree that the financial aid process is unfair, but -- given that everyone's situations are so different and so many people are willing to cheat -- I don't know how to make it fair.