DH and I both paid our own way through college (and he for grad degree) by working fulltime during the day and going to school fulltime at night (private college) while living at home. When we got married we both had one year left to go. We didn't play sports, join clubs or have the "college experience". We did not want to take that off the table for our kids yet we also were not going to go into debt either. We currently have two in college....BOTH will graduate DEBT free and we will have not gone into any debt for it either. Both have substantial funds still in their college accounts from the grands that they plan to use for Grad School.
DS toured a few and decided on the in-state liberal arts school that is a beautiful college setting, small in size in a small town. After a couple years he decided to go a different direction academically and had tired of the small town so transferred to a major state college 45 minutes from home. He lives at home, commutes and has a couple part time jobs - one of which will lead into his career (lots of networking).
DD was an athlete, had planned on playing in college (with scholarship hopes) but had severe injury. She chose to graduate a year early. So we had the double whammy of no athletic scholarship and less a year to prepare. She toured 12 colleges, applied to 8 (unsure due to her age) and was accepted at all and offered well over $250,000 in scholarships. She finally decided to attend the same college as her brother but living there. Ironically the coach heard about her and invited her on the team. After a year she decided if she was going to work that hard she'd like to get a paid job. This college was not her least expensive option. She has been an asst manager at a restaurant and leasing agent at her apartments. She is currently working for the college's athletic dept in marketing which goes with her studies.
What we told our kids was that we would help with Housing, Food, Books, Car expenses, Clothes etc within reason - but they were responsible for Tuition. That is the one thing that they had control over. They could get athletic or merit scholarships, they could fill out applications for hundreds of other scholarships, they could get jobs and save their money or they could be get loans. The loan was a safe idea because our income would be included in the determination - they were offered very little loan money. Knowing that the tuition was on them, they chose very wisely which schools to attend.
Big lesson I learned reading - don't blow a huge amount of money on your undergrad degree. So many jobs now basically require a Grad degree to get ahead or even in for the interview so if that is something you are considering, try to budget for that as well. Mine both plan on Grad School.
Suggestions:
1) READ and do your homework - I felt so much more in the know after reading.
- Go to the library and get "Princeton Review: Paying for College", "How to go to college almost for free", "The Scholarship Scouting Report" and "Winning Scholarships for College".
- BUY the book, "The Ultimate Scholarship Book 2014" and each year after. It lists every scholarship you can imagine, billions of dollars worth. Go through it, each one that applies, have them apply. It is worth the time, and it is worth the lesson to the student to know there are options.
2) Don't rule out private schools as many have foundations for scholarships that far exceed public. They also have the ability to give it out as they choose if they really want your student. My DD applied at a top private school in a neighboring state. They offered her a large scholarship and when she wasn't sure, they upped the amount. All the privates offered her substantial scholarships.
3) Don't rule out-of-state. One major SEC school in another state would have cost less to attend than our own in state school. Her scores (average student) waived the out-of-state tuition and got her two more scholarships. Go on their websites, jump to financial aid and read through all their scholarships. Many will offer them to out-of-state to keep a diverse mix of students from around the country.
4) DH did the CC college route, then private 4 year for his BA and MBA. The core classes are just as good at CC and cost less, especially if living at home. There is considerable money for transfer students because you have already proven you can handle college academics. Keep your GPA as high as possible for more options. There are CC that are live on campuses and many are very nice. Check them out. If you are an athlete then really check them out, there is lots of athletic scholarship money in the junior college association. Do well and transferring with athletic money is very possible.
5) Check with your HS college office for any scholarship through the community, the PTA, the State or Regional PTA, local businesses etc. Many of these are small offerings that don't get printed but are there for you if you ask. My DD actually entered a local business arts competition with a sculpture and was given $750 scholarship that covered her first year's books. Check with your company, many corporations offer employees children the ability to apply for money.
6) Any College Fairs close by or even a short drive. We drove an hour to a big one with each. Sat in on seminars about financial aid. Better yet it is where we found out about several small colleges that offered plenty of money options and we even visited a few of them. I work in a business where I have to explore colleges throughout the US for regarding sports and I have found so many awesome colleges that makes me want to go back to school. You can get incredible personal educations at the smaller schools but often you've never heard of them. The internet has made all this info attainable.
7) Online are a few places that help you work through process:
http://www.thecollegesolution.com/
https://bigfuture.collegeboard.org/
http://collegecost.ed.gov/scorecard/index.aspx
http://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/
8) Fill out FAFSA even if you are sure, like us, you don't qualify. They will use this to determine all other options. Once at a college apply for all the scholarships they have EVERY year. Have them ask about on campus jobs, work/study or not. The plus for them is they don't let them work too much.
9) After Freshman Year, the RA is a good option. My DS did do it for a year and it paid for all of his housing. That was a nice savings.
10) If you are looking at schools that base some scholarships on the SAT/ACT scores, take them multiple times. Start them right off in 9th grade (my DS took his first in 7th). The more you take the more relaxed you become and you can focus better. Both of my kids jumped the last couple times. My DD jumped her last year and the scholarships then jumped as well.
11) Cruise the Scholarship search engine sites - NEVER PAY a fee for scholarship search help. All you need is free online.
TOP RANKED WEBSITES:
www.fastweb.com
www.scholarshipexperts.com
www.scholarships.com
www.upromise.com
NEWER OR LOWER RANKED WEBSITES:
www.cappex.com
www.collegescholarships.org
www.finaid.org
GOVERNMENT SOURCES:
Federal Student Aid / US Dept of Education
http://studentaid.ed.gov/
U S Department of Education
http://www.ed.gov/
U S Department of Health and Human Services
http://www.hrsa.gov/loanscholarships/index.html
FedMoney.org - private site that can guide you to obscure Federal money
Again, two kids graduating debt free from under-grad school with us working together, budgets, watching what we spend once in college etc. Good Luck to you!!!