monarchsfan16
<font color=green>Holy smokes, the DIS is a big pl
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2003
- Messages
- 6,462
If you want my advice you will be far better off to go full time and SAVE the extra money you make to pay the tuition bills.
Need based aid is largely comprised of loans, unless your income is very low. All you are really doing delaying paying (and/or shifting the payments to the student) and adding interest onto the bill. We just had a meeting at work last week where we were talking about the huge increase in students that are graduating with $50 to $100k in student loans. It is becoming common to finance an entire education on student loans/parent loans/private loans. For most majors, the student job prospects simply do not pay the salaries needed to make those payments plus save for retirement, plus buy a house, plus save for their own children's educations. Something is going to crash on them. Honestly, I'm scared for many of them. In my view we are largely telling them "forget buying a house for the next 10 to 20 years - your education IS your house."
Heck, if you want the kid to pay the bill then you loan him the money and have him/her pay you back with interest once they start their career.
This. The reality is, the only way to maximize financial aid (outside of merit scholarships) is to be at/below the poverty level. If you can come even remotely close to paying your bills, your child will not qualify for anything other than loans and work study. If financial aid is what's holding you back from going full time, go full time. You've got 5 years. If you've been living off of the current household income, continue to do so, and bank the new additional income. Those college funds will increase dramatically.

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