photobob
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2003
- Messages
- 3,552
Thanks, ours is in Kindergarten, so not familiar with college aid. Hopefully we won't have to be as we did a PACT (pre-paid tuition program) a few years ago for her. Everyone at the time told us to "invest it in the market" and that would be a better return than the PACT, but given the state of the market the past year, I think that the PACT turned out to be good move...
We did a PACT on our son as well, he is soon to finish Jax State. We had to do the FAFSA on him because he works as a student assistant in the Sports Information Dept. They pay him 15 hours per week at minimum wage I believe. For him to be able to get that paid position it is just like student aid, you have to be eligible through FAFSA to get the job.
BTW when he went to register for this semester he found out that his PACT plan was depleted. Through changing majors and dropping a couple of classes mid-term his hour allotment had been used up. I had to come up with an extra $2800 to pay for his tuition right around Christmas. Lovely.
Thank goodness they both got decent partial 4 yr scholarships and we've got six years before our youngest goes.
I sent two kids thru college and never listed any timeshares as assets. The reason: a timeshare really has no inherent value. Now, we know that DVC has value, but what if you owned most of the other timeshares in Orlando? They are not worth the paper the ownership is printed on, even if you paid $15,000 for them originally. Tomorrow our DVC might be worth $0, so leave it out as an asset. Besides, nobody for FAFSA is going to check any of that stuff, except for the info about your house, and actual vacation homes, and things like that. At least, that's what two accountants told me, and after putting both kids thru school, I noticed that the scholarship money is based on your yearly salary, more than anything else.

, i sure wasn't going to argue the point
