lucigo
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2008
- Messages
- 2,400
It sounds like you are looking at the award letter sent by the financial aid office. You don't have to accept the loans if you don't need them. If the pell grant will cover his tuition and books then you need to decline the loans. We just did this with my son who will be a freshmen. Between his pell grant and scholarships he will have plenty and won't need the loans so we checked the box to decline them and sent the paper back to the college.
If you are in charge of the finances then you need to go with DH down to the financial aid office and educate yourself, this is important stuff.
Good luck!
If you are in charge of the finances then you need to go with DH down to the financial aid office and educate yourself, this is important stuff.
Good luck!




While I would never discourage anybody from "following their dreams", they do need to have a practical plan on how they are going to use that degree to obtain a job (and should research that field to see how plentiful those jobs are).
Thankfully my DH is completely supportive and my graduate school is at a public institution with in-state tuition, not private like my undergrad was. My earning potential will be 5-10 times greater than what I'm making now when I'm done in 4 years, that's the only reason we'll be taking any kind of loans. We have a plan in place for paying back my loans now, we don't want to be blindsided when I graduate.
I do actually think my English degree helped me get into grad school since admission was heavily weighted towards writing ability and the verbal part of the GRE, but still. . . . It was quite the shock to discover that not very many employers care about Chaucer.
I graduated 19 years ago with a degree in English Lit! Surprise Surprise no careers were in the offing unless I wanted to work for free for one year; either as a student teacher or as an unpaid intern (read FT slave laborer) in a publishing house and neither job was readily available. I ended up working as an administrative assistant in an insurance agency. Although it wasn't my dream job it has taken me in an interesting and well paid direction (I'm a Health & Welfare Plans Underwriter) which is only related to my degree in that I polished my analytical skills with earning my degree.