I never said it was simple and if you read my post I specifically said you had to WORK at it. There are millions of dollars out there in scholarship money that goes unclaimed every year. There are scholarships available for kids that have blue eyes or have a German last name. There are also search sites for scholarships that do all the work for you searching them out. You answer a few questions and the best matches show up-that part is really easy. We just did this for our DS17 an 89 scholarships show up on one site alone. We are doing this RIGHT NOW-it isn't something that happened 20 years ago.
I just typed this up, and my computer shut down -- if I'm double-posting, sorry.
While what you're saying is true, it's not the whole story. I've taught high school seniors for almost 20 years, and I see students (and their parents) delve into this idea year after year: They think they're going to get loads of scholarship money just by searching for scholarships and going to the trouble to fill out the paperwork. I have yet to see anyone actually GET one of these mythical "unclaimed" scholarships. No, no, I am not telling you the truth: I've seen people GET them, but I have yet to see anyone USE them. And I've seen a great deal of disappointment over these "unclaimed" scholarships.
Here's the catch:
These too-good-to-be-true scholarships -- the ones that promise money to a blue-eyed athlete with asthma, or a future business major whose parent was in the miltary, or a left-handed student who can prove Italian ancestory -- are real, BUT they are only available to students who are going to attend CERTAIN SCHOOLS (usually expensive schools). In reality, accepting these small scholarships would mean the student would have to pass up an affordably-priced state school near their own home . . . and instead attend an expensive, often private school several states away. Often students don't realize that the scholarship has significant strings attached until he's already put a good bit of work into obtaining the award. In the worse situations, some of these scholarships charge "application fees", and students who don't read the fine print
(scholarship can only be used at University of Alaska's community college branch, and only by students planning to study dentistry) may pay before they realize that they'll never use this particular scholarship. The math doesn't work in the student's favor; money is not sitting around unclaimed.
Oh, if you're the right person in the right place and you know to apply, it's a great little perk -- but it's not going to be enough to put you through college, and it's not going to be enough to justify choosing that other school.
Let me give you a real-life example: My own daugthers are very involved in scouting, and GSUSA is always talking about scouts earning scholarships. So I decided to look into it, thinking that my girls would definitely qualify. Oh, they'll qualify all right . . . they can get a couple-hundred dollars IF we choose to send them to private schools in the $30,000 range, the closest of which is two states away. It makes much more sense to investigate the in-state options, which run $10,000-12,000.
It's kind of like Disney's get-a-free ticket on your birthday special. Yeah, I can get into the parks for free . . . if I pay for the rest of my family's tickets, transportation to Florida, a hotel, meals and more. It's a great deal FOR THE PERSON WHO WAS GOING ANYWAY. It's not enough to convince you to make the trip.
I hope you can prove me wrong. Go through those 89 scholarships, and see how many of them are REALISTIC CHOICES for your son. Not things for which he's qualified, but things which he'd actually be able to use.