Student Loan with Less Than Stellar Credit?

I'm not going to disagree with you about the BA in History. ;) DD has a degree in SpEd and it was still pretty hard for her to get a teaching job. The district that hired her had over 5,000 applications for the 34 positions (not all teaching). Needless to say, we are very thankful that she has a job as a new graduate.

Lots of the other jobs you listed never used to require a degree but lately they seem to. My DH is an auto tech (they don't like being called mechanics for some reason;)). He went to community college 27 years ago and got all of his tech classes. He's been a journeymen for 25 years but the guys that they've hired in the last 10 years or so all have some type of technical school (Lincoln Tech...) It may not be a B.A. but it still costs the same if not more. There's also very little hope of them ever making it to journeymen. They keep them at much lower pay rates as quick lube, semi-skilled or apprentice. Same goes for electricians, machinists, elevator techs... Not to mention that so many of these jobs have been hit with huge layoffs. Getting in without schooling or experience is next to impossible.

I agree, school is important, but it doesn't have to be college. (And my neighbor is a mechanic - not an autotechnician. He works on planes.)

(My first almost a degree was in Art History with a minor in History - not terribly employable in the field. I did admin work for a long time before ending up in a career job).
 
You're right, college is not a right but without a degree, it can be near impossible to get a job. Heck, even with a degree it's hard.

I'm guessing that the cost that you quoted is for tuition only. If you don't live near a public university, you have to add on room and board. Often times that is as much as the cost of tuition.

I never said I agreed with the idea of needing a college degree for many occupations. I actually think it is a horrible thing that we no longer use things like trade schools. Some people are just not college material... and some people just can not afford it.

And for the record, during my undergrad, that included room and board. Now, without room and board but including all fees and at 12 grad hours, I am paying $4.5k a semester.
 
I'm in a little bit of a panic and hoping the Disers can help! I'll speak with the financial aid office tomorrow but in the meantime......My daughter will be attending a Pa. public university in the fall. She has been approved for a Stafford loan and a small Pell grant. I went online to apply for a Sallie Mae loan to cover the rest, about $15,000 a year. I was rejected! We own our own home, never claimed bankruptcy or defaulted on anything. My husband was laid off last year and we have some med bills that went to collections along with lots of late credit payments. He's back to work and we are slowly getting back on track. Where do you turn for student loans if your credit is bad?



Yes, she was approved for $6500 in subsidized loans and a $700 grant. All FAFSA info remains the same. I'll apply for the PLUS loan and see what happens. She'll be attending West Chester University.
Thanks for the info.




So.......the update is I was not approved for the Parent Plus loan. I called the school to tell them and they said she would get the extra $4000 Stafford loan. Now that leaves a difference of about $10,000. I need to start looking for private loans. Does anyone know any reputable lenders? The college is not allowed to recommend anyone by law.:confused3



I was unable to get a private loan. In the meantime, I'm holding off on paying the August mortgage so I can send a payment installment to the college so my daughter can start school in 3 weeks. My sister in law has SallieMae loans for her own daughter and is looking into "piggybacking" a loan for my daughter. I'm a teacher and I waitress in the summer. I now plan to be a teacher/waitress all year:sad2: Plus I'll probably tutor. She will also be expected to get a job once she settles into school.
My husband and I wrote up a budget to get our credit back in good standing. Hopefully we'll qualify for loans next year. I wonder if 1 year of timely payments is enough to straighten it out?


NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO This will only result is your DD not getting a college degree and not having a home to come home from college to.


I never understand the theory of sending a child out of state to attend a state college. NJ has state colleges and it would be cheaper.

It is time to have a "Come to" talk with your DD. She just cannot afford to got to this college. Have her apply at the local community college and start there.
 
I'm sure once your daughter gets over the disappointment, she will find CC is not as bad as she thinks. It will probably be plenty of fun. Unfortunately, you have to be the responsible parent here, I know it is hard to have to tell her no, but it really is the right thing to do. :hug:

My daughter is only 10, and I've been priming her since she was 5 to go to the CC down the street from us. After that, she'll have to still live at home and finish up at one of the two regular universities within a 20 minute drive of our house. I will do everything I can to get her through college on that plan without debt, but that's the only way I will be able to do it as a single parent and still take care of my own needs such as retirement.

I lived at home with my parents during college - while my college experience wasn't as crazy as many folks, it wasn't dull either. I have no baggage from attending college the way I did - in fact, I think it had its own benefits and am glad I did it that way. And I am VERY, VERY glad my parents did not take on any debt for it.

ETA - My degree is NOT from a top school, just your run of the mill state university. Most people hear the college I graduated from and get that look on their face like they didn't think that school had a degree in my field! It didn't impact me terribly as far as getting a job first out of school, and 20 years into my career no one could care less where I got my degree. Only if your child has very particular, specific careers in mind do they need to go to just the "right" school.
 

I'm in a little bit of a panic and hoping the Disers can help! I'll speak with the financial aid office tomorrow but in the meantime......My daughter will be attending a Pa. public university in the fall. She has been approved for a Stafford loan and a small Pell grant. I went online to apply for a Sallie Mae loan to cover the rest, about $15,000 a year. I was rejected! We own our own home, never claimed bankruptcy or defaulted on anything. My husband was laid off last year and we have some med bills that went to collections along with lots of late credit payments. He's back to work and we are slowly getting back on track. Where do you turn for student loans if your credit is bad?
OP, I was searching for the words to say it, but others have already said it: You can't afford this school.

It's better to face that fact up front BEFORE she begins school. It'd be worse to have to leave school because she can't pay the spring tuition, or to be forced to transfer sophomore year.
Not true, but you HAVE to pick a college you can afford, and it helps if mom and dad have been saving for it for the past 18 years - most families simply can't create $10,000 a year that they didn't have.

The 4 year state school I graduated from was $6k a year. A lot of us - including myself - worked full time and took classes half time and lived at home. That meant we had $3k a year to fund - and took eight years to graduate (I started "mostly done" but switched majors - I only had three years of school - including summers - but I graduated with people who had been going to school for ten years to get their B.S.).

There are three huge issues with college funding:

Parents put off saving - when your kid is two, or six, or ten - college seems so far away and there are so many other demands on your income.

Kids and their parents pick colleges not based off what is reasonable to afford, but off where they want to go.

Parents and kids believe that scholarships and financial aid is available. It is available - but it isn't sufficient to cover all your kid's expenses at anything more than a community college (and probably not there) and it most often comes in the form of loans which leave you and your child in debt for college. Its hard to look at your two year old and know they have the talent for a hockey scholarship or are going to be a National Merit Scholar. Don't bet on it.
Crisi, as usual, you've hit the nail on the head. People buy into false ideas about college (it's years away, left handed scholarships are out there, etc.), but I think you've correctly identified the three biggest issues that get people into financial trouble with college. Now that it's more difficult to borrow, the problems that've always been there are magnified.

I'd add just one detail to the "parents put off saving" thought: Many young parents are paying off thier own students loans, and that's one of the things that prevents them from saving for their own children's educations. It's a vicious cycle, and in the OP's case her only choice is to choose a less expensive school.
To be blunt... college is not a right. Not everyone should be in college or can afford college. The issue is that we as a country have forgotten that. If you don't have a college degree it can be hard to find jobs. We have allowed it to become this way.
I remember reading some time back that 20% of Americans have a college degree, and 25% claim they do. I don't know if that's true, but I just googled this information, which came from USA Today:

63% of high school graduates go straight into college
15.5% complete a bachelor's degree
8.9% complete a bachelor's degree and a graduate degree

I'm taking these from a rather poorly written article, but I looked at a couple other sites too. Most of these articles say that 27-28% of all Americans have a bachelor's degree. Regardless, I think it's safe to say that less than 30% of Americans have a bachelor's degree.
So most Americans are finding jobs, working, and supporting themselves without a degree.

What does this have to do with the OP's daugther? Not much. She's a good student, and we have every reason to believe she'll be successful and will be in the minority that'll earn a degree . . . but she has to get herself into a school she can afford.
. . . He went to community college 27 years ago and got all of his tech classes . . . all have some type of technical school . . . It may not be a B.A. but it still costs the same if not more.
Yes, LOTS of jobs require education past high school but NOT in the form of traditional college. Yet too many parents /high school students ignore those very real options and pay attention only to the traditional college plan, a plan that's not going to become reality for the majority of our students.

My brother is a huge proponent of high school vocational programs. He himself took every high school class in the field of electronics; then he went into the Navy, where he learned more. He says that today he earns his living with what he learned in those high school classes. If more students paid attention to those very good options (bricklaying, auto mechanics, etc.) in high school, they'd be doing better than some college graduates!
It isn't the tuition cost, it is the room and board that kill you!
And subtract the full-time income they aren't earning during college.

Serious question: Do college students work/save any more? On the boards, parents are always talking about scholarships, financial aid, and loans . . . but I never hear about college students working for a portion of their college expenses. When I was in college, I worked non-stop and saved every penny -- I didn't have good choices, and I'd like to see my daugthers work a more moderate schedule during their college years. Today it seems that most college students I know personally are working part-time during the summers and maybe a few hours a week during school. I know I worked much more than most college students in my generation, but I wonder if I have a realistic gauge on this or not. College-student type work IS a little harder to find these days, but most of my high school students have part-time jobs, so it's not impossible in this area.
Please don't think of community college as a death sentence or something. It's not the case! Many people graduate from a community college and do quite well, or transfer their credits and still complete their degree. Most employers look for a degree, and don't even realize that you spent the first 2 years of your college life at a community college.
My husband goofed off in high school. After graduation, he worked a few years, and then decided that college looked pretty good. He says that if he'd gone straight to a 4-year university, he'd never have made it. He says community college was the absolute best option for him. Because he started in communty college, he did spend 5 years total earning his degree, but he says it was the right path for him.
Please, please do not jeopardize your home for your daughter's education. She is an adult now, if she really, really wants to go to college she will find a way. Suze Orman had a woman on a few weeks ago. She and her daughter are on the hook for 100K in student loans. The woman now has serious financial trouble and a very uncertain financial future.
Sadly, that's a story we've all heard too many times. Someone (probably a loan officer) invented this concept of "good debt" and sold the American public on the idea that borrowing for college is a positive thing. Being a society given to extremes, we've taken this concept and turned it into permission to send any student to any college -- regardless of ability to pay. Moderation has to come into play in these decisions.
 
I'd add just one detail to the "parents put off saving" thought: Many young parents are paying off thier own students loans, and that's one of the things that prevents them from saving for their own children's educations. It's a vicious cycle, and in the OP's case her only choice is to choose a less expensive school.

That's one of the reasons I think college is a multi generational effort. My dad went to a cheap state school back when it was possible to do it yourself and pay out of pocket - but he worked full time, went to school full time, and lived at home rent free to do it, with his parents picking up most of his "personal expenses."

He wanted better for his kids, so he actually saved. We didn't have orange juice in our house growing up, too expensive, and went on ONE vacation - but he put three kids through in state college. We didn't have choices about out of state. And if we wanted to live on campus, we worked in order to pay room and board. My dad made "too much money" way back in 1984 for me to qualify for financial aid - but we didn't have orange juice in our house, my parents drove old cars, and we ate a whole lot of noodles.

And we've been saving for our kids - student loans (my husband had them) are a huge burden when you are just out of school. And we hope to have started saving for our eventual grandkids.

I read an article about the rich and the poor. The poor plan for today. The middle class plan for their retirement, the rich plan for their grandkids' college. I don't think that its ONLY a resource issue (though planning for tomorrow is a hell of a lot harder when you are broke), I think it has as much to do with attitude.
 
BTW, just in case people are confused.

I went to college from 1984 to 1988 majoring in Art History and minoring History. I didn't quite graduate, having never written the senior thesis required for my major. However, I got lucky and a combination of "right place/right time," hard work, and a good skill set meant the lack of formal degree was pretty meaningless over my career for the most part.

In 2004 I went back to school and changed majors. I graduated in 2008 with a degree in Accounting - a much more practical field in which I don't work. (I think those dates are right). At that point I was married, employed full time and had two children. But felt like the next time I had to look for a job, that lack of degree was going to bite me.
 
That's one of the reasons I think college is a multi generational effort. My dad went to a cheap state school back when it was possible to do it yourself and pay out of pocket - but he worked full time, went to school full time, and lived at home rent free to do it, with his parents picking up most of his "personal expenses."

He wanted better for his kids, so he actually saved. We didn't have orange juice in our house growing up, too expensive, and went on ONE vacation - but he put three kids through in state college. We didn't have choices about out of state. And if we wanted to live on campus, we worked in order to pay room and board. My dad made "too much money" way back in 1984 for me to qualify for financial aid - but we didn't have orange juice in our house, my parents drove old cars, and we ate a whole lot of noodles.

And we've been saving for our kids - student loans (my husband had them) are a huge burden when you are just out of school. And we hope to have started saving for our eventual grandkids.

I read an article about the rich and the poor. The poor plan for today. The middle class plan for their retirement, the rich plan for their grandkids' college. I don't think that its ONLY a resource issue (though planning for tomorrow is a hell of a lot harder when you are broke), I think it has as much to do with attitude.
I agree that ideally college would be a multi-generational effort. It'd be nice if the entire family pitched in to be sure that the youngest generation is able to go to college without incurring debt. However, so many families today have enough trouble getting mom and dad on the same page financially that it'd be even tougher to bring in more people!

I also did the cheap state school thing; my parents did nothing to help me through college. In fact, year after year they refused to fill out financial aid paperwork in a timely manner, which hurt me financially. I knew they didn't have money to give me, but I do still resent that they wouldn't help me in that small way.

My husband's father paid his tuition, while he paid his own living expenses. For him, living at home was not an option. At that time (I think it's different now) engineering was only offered at two colleges, and the closest one was a good three-hour drive.

We have both always felt that making college possible for our girls was a priority, and we've been saving for that specific purpose literally since before they were conceived. Our oldest is very likey to get a very good scholarship, but we're very relieved that the money is there . . . and the youngest doesn't have quite the academics that her sister has, though we're hoping that she'll become a little more serious once she hits hit school.

Interesting concept of poor plan for today, etc. Here's how I see my own responsibilities -- they don't really fit into either the middle class or the rich classification, perhaps because I grew up poor and fought my way into the middle class, my thinking isn't quite as one-category:

- My two main savings goals are to fund my children's college and my retirement.

- I am trying to guide them towards choices that'll allow them to graduate debt-free. I feel that if I can do this -- get them a clear start in their professional lives -- that they'll be able to save for themselves and their own children. I've already instilled my mighty fear of debt into my teenaged children, and I will continue to help them understand that if they can avoid debt, their money will go so much farther.

- When the youngest graduates from college -- the Lord and my health willing -- I'll have 8 more years to work to complete a full pension. At that point, I'll be 57, and I'll probably work in some other capacity (perhaps not full time) for a couple more years. During that post-college timeframe, DH and I agree that we will aggressively step up our retirement savings and will build our retirement house.

- I would help my grandchildren with college expenses, but I see that as primarily my daughters' responsibility. I do think I'd start/contribute to a college savings account for grandchildren at birth/on birthdays, but I don't see that as a primary goal -- more of a secondary thing. I don't put that in the same category as seeing my own daughters through college. If I get my girls through college debt-free, that should give them a good leg-up in the world, and they should be able to take on primary responsibility for their own children.

- And we have a unique twist: Family land. I feel a very big responsibility to maintain it for future generations, and although that's not college-expensive, it does cost. In my mind, I have a greater responsibility to do that than to fund grandchildren's college. DH and I intend to build our retirement house on this land, and we want our girls/their children to be able to inherit this land. This land has kept 250 years of my family, and I won't be the one who sells even an inch of it. My grandmother's told me all my life that it's okay to use the land -- to farm it, to rent it, to borrow against it -- but I must never sell it.
 
I'd add just one detail to the "parents put off saving" thought: Many young parents are paying off thier own students loans, and that's one of the things that prevents them from saving for their own children's educations. It's a vicious cycle, and in the OP's case her only choice is to choose a less expensive school.
This is where we are right now. I'm still paying off my own student loans, so we have not really started a college savings account for DD yet. She does have a savings account that her grandmother started for her, and an account for any $ she receives as gifts, but that's all so far. Oh, and a whopping like $70 from UPromise, lol. When I'm finished paying off my own loans, I plan to start putting that monthly payment into a college account for DD. I doubt we'll ever make enough money to pay OOP for Harvard, but I hope to be able to help my children more than my parents were able to help me.

We fell into the place a lot of middle class families find themselves in - my parents made too much money for me to qualify for grants, but not enough money to pay for my education. They also weren't the best money managers, but that's for another thread. I did go away to school for 3 semesters; most of it was paid for with loans, although I did get a small scholarship. I also did a work study & in my 3rd semester got a part-time job to give myself spending money. After 3 semesters I changed my mind about the program I was in (which is why I'd chosen that school) and was very unhappy there personally so I left school, moved back home, & took a year off. When I did go back I went to a state school, took out loans in my own name to pay for it, & had a part-time job (full-time during school breaks) to pay for my books, car, phone, & other expenses. I lived at home so my parents gave me housing & food.

The one thing I wish now that my parents had done for me was gave me some financial guidance. I didn't make any payments on my loan while I was in school, although I made enough to have done so if I'd had a budget. Instead I spent it on traveling, going out, etc. I even got a check for several hundred dollars once because the loan amount was more than my tuition that semester so the school returned the money to me - I know now I should've sent that money right back to the lender, but at the time that didn't even occur to me & I spent the money.

I've learned a lot about budgeting & saving from this board, & I hope to be able to teach my kids to be smart with money from a young age so they don't have the same financial challenges I did.

P.S. - My younger sister went to community college first & then transfered to a 4-year state school (the same one I graduated from) to finish her bachelor's degree. Like others have said, you only list on your resume the school you graduate from, so potential employers need not even know that you started out at a CC.

P.S.S. - Neither of parents have college degrees. They both went to a community college for a while after high school (that's where they met) but didn't finish.
 
Serious question: Do college students work/save any more? On the boards, parents are always talking about scholarships, financial aid, and loans . . . but I never hear about college students working for a portion of their college expenses. When I was in college, I worked non-stop and saved every penny -- I didn't have good choices, and I'd like to see my daugthers work a more moderate schedule during their college years. Today it seems that most college students I know personally are working part-time during the summers and maybe a few hours a week during school. I know I worked much more than most college students in my generation, but I wonder if I have a realistic gauge on this or not. College-student type work IS a little harder to find these days, but most of my high school students have part-time jobs, so it's not impossible in this area.

I am a current undergraduate student, and I have balanced a part-time job (15-20 hours a week) with a full courseload since high school. But you are correct, college jobs are very difficult to find. I am extremely fortunate that I've been able to hang onto mine throughout school. Around here, unless you apply 3 weeks before the beginning of fall semester, you're out of luck. Even work-study availability is a joke.
 
Most of my college class (the most recent one) held down full time jobs and went to college either part or full time. Some went to school full time and held part time jobs.

The last year of school, several of them didn't work for pay - they did internships - and went to school full time.
 
My D has worked 40 hours a week this summer. She doesn't make much per hour but she's working midnights doing factory work. She's saved most of what she made other than a trip to Cedar Point at the beginning of the summer.

She also has a work study job at school so she'll work as much as they give her.

So all that work and a demanding engineering major. She'll be able to maybe pay for her books, food, personal expenses and maybe some of her utilities.
 
Interesting concept of poor plan for today, etc. Here's how I see my own responsibilities -- they don't really fit into either the middle class or the rich classification, perhaps because I grew up poor and fought my way into the middle class, my thinking isn't quite as one-category:

- My two main savings goals are to fund my children's college and my retirement.

- I am trying to guide them towards choices that'll allow them to graduate debt-free. I feel that if I can do this -- get them a clear start in their professional lives -- that they'll be able to save for themselves and their own children. I've already instilled my mighty fear of debt into my teenaged children, and I will continue to help them understand that if they can avoid debt, their money will go so much farther.

- When the youngest graduates from college -- the Lord and my health willing -- I'll have 8 more years to work to complete a full pension. At that point, I'll be 57, and I'll probably work in some other capacity (perhaps not full time) for a couple more years. During that post-college timeframe, DH and I agree that we will aggressively step up our retirement savings and will build our retirement house.

- I would help my grandchildren with college expenses, but I see that as primarily my daughters' responsibility. I do think I'd start/contribute to a college savings account for grandchildren at birth/on birthdays, but I don't see that as a primary goal -- more of a secondary thing. I don't put that in the same category as seeing my own daughters through college. If I get my girls through college debt-free, that should give them a good leg-up in the world, and they should be able to take on primary responsibility for their own children.

ITA with this. DH and both paid our own way through college. That meant student loans and no financial aid due to the income of our parents. Neither sets of parents helped pay for college. So DH and I started our marriage behind the 8 ball.

We have done well and saved to fund our futures but not to fund the futures for generations that are not yet born.

I think we have done better than the middle class and pretty good since we will 100% fund our retirement and kid's college.

The kids will start out in better shape then we did, debt free out of college, so they could fund their own retirement, kid's colleges and grandkid's colleges.
 
I worked throughout my whole college experience, and I expect my son to do the same. Not only did it help with the expenses, but it feel like I appreciated the chance to get an education that much more. For my last three years, I worked my schedule around my job as a nanny,working for an hour in the morning to get the kids up and to school, then going to class for three hours, them going back to pick the kids up at 11:30 and 2:30, did grocery shopping, made dinner, took the kids to soccer, etc. Got off about 7pm and went home to do my homework for class. My roommate did not work; sat around and watched soaps and ate pizza all day. And I made BETTER grades than she did, LOL.

DS will be going to CC for his first two years and depending on what he decides to do, maybe for longer. I am still paying off student loans(just getting my Masters), so I can't afford to pay much. Being a single mom, I hope he can get some student loans.

Marsha
 
DD starts college in a few weeks. She's been working at a local grocery store since she was 15 (it will be 4 years this fall) and saving for school all that time.

She's attending a local college so she won't have to pay room and board. Her tuition, mandatory fees, books and supplies are being funded by a combination of scholarships, loans and OOP.
 
I agree with everyone else here...that, unfortunately, there's just not enough money here for OP's DD to go away to university this semester. I can only imagine how difficult this is for OP as a parent, and for DD who thought she'd get to go. I'm so sorry. :sad1:

One option for cutting college costs is to pile on the classes, take summer school at community college, and graduate sooner. For a lot of schools, especially state schools, the tuition isn't so bad -- it's the room and board expenses that really kill you. I took placement tests to test out of as much college credit as I could. Then I took any classes that would transfer at community college when I was home for the summer. I got my degree in 3 years. I actually graduated college before I turned 21, so no boozy frat parties for me. :lmao:

Now, I didn't work during the regular school year. It was impossible with my course load, especially as computer science major. I did work summers and went to community college. I was blessed -- my folks paid for my first two years of college, and I had saved enough to pay for my last year myself. That was in Texas in the '80's, though. Texas had cheap colleges back then!

I still think it would be worth it to run the numbers. Depending on the college, it might save you money to graduate sooner -- even with student loans -- than to work for minimum wage and take longer to get out. I have a cousin who will graduate in three years following this plan, and it's saved his family a lot of money.
 
I'm in a little bit of a panic and hoping the Disers can help! I'll speak with the financial aid office tomorrow but in the meantime......My daughter will be attending a Pa. public university in the fall. She has been approved for a Stafford loan and a small Pell grant. I went online to apply for a Sallie Mae loan to cover the rest, about $15,000 a year. I was rejected! We own our own home, never claimed bankruptcy or defaulted on anything. My husband was laid off last year and we have some med bills that went to collections along with lots of late credit payments. He's back to work and we are slowly getting back on track. Where do you turn for student loans if your credit is bad?

hum, that is weird...I never applied for any loans(I am in school full time) and my credit is destroyed thanks to ex! And they gave me(student loans) $7000 each semester ( which I took so I can live and work PT) and that is with full grants and scholarships. I did apply right away when I could.
You can also look into getting a co~signer.
 
I agree with everyone else here...that, unfortunately, there's just not enough money here for OP's DD to go away to university this semester. I can only imagine how difficult this is for OP as a parent, and for DD who thought she'd get to go. I'm so sorry. :sad1:

One option for cutting college costs is to pile on the classes, take summer school at community college, and graduate sooner. For a lot of schools, especially state schools, the tuition isn't so bad -- it's the room and board expenses that really kill you. I took placement tests to test out of as much college credit as I could. Then I took any classes that would transfer at community college when I was home for the summer. I got my degree in 3 years. I actually graduated college before I turned 21, so no boozy frat parties for me. :lmao:

Now, I didn't work during the regular school year. It was impossible with my course load, especially as computer science major. I did work summers and went to community college. I was blessed -- my folks paid for my first two years of college, and I had saved enough to pay for my last year myself. That was in Texas in the '80's, though. Texas had cheap colleges back then!

I still think it would be worth it to run the numbers. Depending on the college, it might save you money to graduate sooner -- even with student loans -- than to work for minimum wage and take longer to get out. I have a cousin who will graduate in three years following this plan, and it's saved his family a lot of money.

A lot of schools also max out after a full load. For me a full load was 16 credits - usually four classes. Some full time students took 20 credits - five classes - getting one class for "free." One guy took 24 credits a semester, getting two classes for free and graduating in three years instead of four - saving himself 25% of his tuition.

Now, you'd have to be a little nuts to do six classes a semester. You shouldn't work, or have a social life. And you might not want to do it if you need a high GPA for grad school. Personally, I'd rather go to CC for two years and take my time.
 
I worked throughout my own college expereince, but back then at $3.35 an hour it funded books, spending money--for clothing, toiletries, laundry, nothing frivolous, car insurance, gas and routine car maintainence. I worked full time in a factory for summer, Christmas break and Spring Break. I did work study 15 hours per week while in school.

My DS, though I harp on it all the time, worked part time and managed to give as little availability as possible. He is the only one in the household who thinks money falls from the skies. He is in for a rude awakening...so yup he will be taking loans out because he didn't do what he needed to do to prevent that. He is the one who chose CC as far away as possible without a dime to his name, so he can foot the nearly $8000 room and board, I will pay tuition.
 












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