الأربعاء، 12 مارس 2008

Student Loan Tips


Student Loan Tips
Brooke Heath12/20/06
Meet with your financial aid or guidance counselor to get a better understanding of the student loan process.
Do not assume that you will not qualify for financial aid - there are many options available. (Some loans such as unsubsidized Stafford Loans and PLUS Loans are granted regardless of need.)
Start planning early! You can fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) (after January 1st) even before you graduate from high school. If you have graduated already, start it ASAP!
Make sure that the FAFSA form you are filling out is the correct form for the school year in which you are seeking financial aid for.
Have all income, asset, tax information, etc. information available and ready to go before starting to fill out the FAFSA form.
Include your parents or guardians in on the whole process to help you with any questions that you might have about your expected family contribution (EFC), income, etc.
If filling out a paper copy of the FAFSA form, make a photocopy beforehand to practice on, to avoid making any mistakes on the original.
Consider completing the FAFSA form on the web at www.fafsa.ed.gov.
Always read the instructions before starting to fill out the FAFSA form, and follow them exactly.
Make sure that your FAFSA form is filled out completely and accurately to avoid delays.
Be honest and precise when filling out your FAFSA – do not lie about incomes, etc.
Do not leave any spaces on your FAFSA form blank. Put a zero in the space instead.
Do your research – not all loans are created equal!
Shop around! Compare lenders and see who will give you the best deal.
Look for a lender who will offer a variety of flexible programs to choose from.
Look for a loan that does not have prepayment penalties – paying all or part of your loan off early will save on interest!
Look for a lender who will guide you through the student loan process and answer any questions that you might have.
Educate yourself on the types of loans and see which one fits your needs the best.
Understand the benefits and differences between federal loans and private loans.
Understand that private loans require a credit check.
Consider using a co-signer on private loans.
Understand the difference between subsidized federal loans and unsubsidized federal loans.
Always read the fine print on your loans, so that you know exactly what terms you are agreeing to.
Do not borrow more than is necessary – remember that you will eventually be paying this money back
Sign and return all award letters and/or Master Promissory Notes ASAP!
If you are not satisfied with the amount of financial aid you receive, negotiate with your school’s financial aid officers, or your lenders.
Find out about forgiveness options. Some fields of study offer to compensate part or all of your loans if you will work in that field for a number of years
Watch your mail for important information regarding your loan before, during and after your schooling.
Pay interest on unsubsidized loans while you are still in school, if possible.
Maintain half-time student status. This will keep your loans in deferment, meaning that you will not have to pay the monthly payment yet. If you do drop below a half-time status, you will enter the repayment period of the loan.
Stay within your budget to avoid using all of your loan money too soon.
Use student loans only for educational purposes. Using this money for other reasons is fraudulent and a criminal offense.
If you are filing taxes, meet with your CPA to discuss your options for deductions regarding your financial aid.
Attend all of the required Entrance and Exit Loan Counseling Sessions. This will give you important information pertaining to your loan.
Make your lender aware of any name or address changes to avoid any unnecessary problems.
Consolidate your loans – this could save you thousands of dollars
Consolidate your loans while you are still in your grace period! This will allow you to lock-in at a lower rate than after your grace period is over.
Look for a company to consolidate with who will offer the best rates and incentives.
Look for a company to consolidate with who will guide you through the process and answer any questions that you might have.
Consolidate with a company who will offer different payment plans and options that will accommodate you and your income.
Take advantage of borrower benefits. EdFed offers a borrower benefit of saving .25% off of your interest rate by paying with auto-debit, as well as an additional 1% rate deduction after 36 consecutive payments.
Create a realistic budget to help with paying your monthly loan payments.
Stay organized! Keep copies of your applications and other forms on file.
Make your monthly payments on time! Failing to do so can lead to default.
Make your monthly payments, regardless of whether or not you receive a bill. You are obligated to make the payments each month, even if you do not receive a reminder.
If you are unable to make your payments, contact your lender immediately. There are deferment or forbearance options that could temporarily postpone your monthly payments.
If you are granted forbearance, do not drag it out longer than necessary. The interest that accrues while you are in forbearance will be added to your loan balance.
If forbearance is necessary, consider it only for your federal loans, and continue making the monthly payments on your private loans. Private loans tend to have a higher interest rate, so this will save you money in the long run.
Round your monthly payments up. Paying a little extra each month, can save you a lot of money in the long run.
Stay informed about your loans. Always be aware of the balance, interest rates, etc.

private loans

Are you an incoming freshman or a returning student in need of additional help with tuition and living expenses? We designed our Private Tuition Loan specifically with your needs in mind. It's the answer you've been looking for. EligibilityAny incoming freshman or returning students can apply for our Private Tuition Loan. You must be enrolled. How Much Can I Borrow?The total amount you can borrower is determined by a variety of factors. Contact one of our expert Loan Counselors to find out how much you can borrow. How Do I Apply?It's easy! You can apply anytime, even after a semester has started! We can pre approve you over the phone in as little as three minutes. Or you can apply online. Interest Rate and FeesThe interest rate on our Private Tuition Loan is determined by a credit evaluation.
For those individuals who are thinking about attending college or graduate school, there are many things to consider. From which school to attend to deadlines, one must devote lot of time and energy to this endeavor. The price tag of course weighs heavily on one’s decision to attend this or that school and even whether to attend at all. With the average cost of tuition, fees, room and board being $29,026 at four-year private colleges and universities, and $12,127 at four-year public colleges and universities,1 the cost of attendance is sure to cause a moment of pause and even dissuade one from attending. Graduate or professional school can cost even more. However, the cost of attendance is not the only thing to consider. Rather than focusing on the present or even immediate future, that is, paying the costs of college or graduate school tuition, one should bear in mind the benefits of investing so much into higher education. Many individuals are aware of the fact that higher education greatly increases career and financial opportunities. A college or graduate degree vastly improves one’s chances of achieving goals than a high school diploma. In fact, merely having a high school diploma significantly limits one’s prospects. A college or graduate degree will open doors and provide you with the tools necessary to make your dreams of upward mobility a reality. Aside from the social leverage one can wield by holding a college diploma or advanced degree, the monetary potentials far outweigh the initial investment. The graph below demonstrates this point. Listed are the median annual incomes according to level of education. Another piece of insightful information is the percentage of individuals holding each type of degree who are unemployed
As you can see, the benefits of a higher education are twofold. First, the higher the level of education an individual has, the higher the annual income she or he earns. Second, an individual lowers their risk of unemployment by obtaining a higher education degree. So think of it this way: Even if you end up with a high amount of debt after you graduate, you’ll earn that back in just a couple of years. Remember, anything you invest in higher education now will give you a huge return in more ways than one

The Availability of Federal Student Loans

The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) is confident that federal student loans will be available to families and students this coming academic year. Alarming reports about disruptions in the credit markets that are affecting student loans have many families worried that student loans won't be available this fall. However, financial aid administrators, schools, federal lawmakers, the U.S. Department of Education, and student loan providers are all working together to ensure that no student is denied access to federal student loans.
Despite some troubling reports, low-cost federal student loans are still available. To date, NASFAA is not aware of any student being denied a federal student loan due to market conditions. Even in instances where student loan providers have suspended participation in the federal loan programs, other loan providers have stepped in to fill in. Should conditions worsen to the point where they could affect the availability of federal student loans, NASFAA has received assurances that federal lawmakers, the U.S. Department of Education, and other federal agencies will take appropriate actions to ensure an uninterrupted supply of low-cost federal student loans to students and families.
News reports often blur the line between federal and private student loans, but understanding the difference between the two is crucial. The vast majority of student borrowers use federal student loans. Federal student loans - like Perkins, Stafford, and PLUS loans - are backed by the federal government. Federal student loans are not dependent on borrowers' credit scores; the repayment terms and conditions are specified by federal law, and are usually better than private loans. Interest rates and fees on federal student loans will not increase.
A far smaller group of students rely on private student loans or other forms of consumer financing like home equity loans. These students turn to private loans if they cannot cover their cost of attendance with federal, state, and institutional financial aid - including federal loans. Like other consumer loans affected by the subprime mortgage meltdown, private student loans will be costlier for some borrowers at some institutions this academic year. However, students and parents should only use private education loans as a last resort. Before borrowing private loans, students should exhaust all the federal, state and institutional financial aid available to them.
To ensure a smooth financial transition into college this next academic year, NASFAA advises students and families to apply for financial aid early by using the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). Students should work closely with their school's financial aid office to complete the financial aid process - including applying for federal student loans - as early as possible. Students and parents with any questions or doubts about the availability of student loans or other forms of financial aid should always contact their financial aid office for specific information.
The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) is a nonprofit membership organization that represents more than 13,000 financial aid professionals at nearly 3,000 colleges and universities and career schools across the country. Based in Washington, D.C., NASFAA is the only national association with a primary focus on student aid legislation, regulatory analysis

A Student Loan Credit Crunch — But for Whom

A Student Loan Credit Crunch — But for WhomThe phrases “credit crunch” and “student loans” are blaring with increasing frequency from newspaper headlines and TV news broadcasts. With growing numbers of banks and other loan providers announcing layoffs or plans to leave or limit participation in the student loan market, it is clear that the general problems in the financial markets have created a credit crunch crisis for student loan providers. But is there a loan crisis for student borrowers themselves?
That depends in large part on what kind of loans — and what kind of students — you’re talking aboutTo date, the impact has been largely limited to private, or alternative loans, the higher-cost loans, held by fewer than 10 percent of student loan borrowers, that students typically take out to cover the difference between the total value of their federal, state and institutional grants and loans and the full price of attending the college of their choice. Parties including Education Secretary Margaret Spellings, the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, and (even) the Consumer Bankers Association have taken pains in recent days to make clear that federal loans remain available to all students who seek them
And, to this point, the impact has been felt most heavily by far by students at for-profit colleges, which tend to be relatively high cost and to serve a disproportionate number of low-income, first-generation college students.
Those facts — that the credit squeeze has so far been relegated to private loans and to career colleges — have created a situation in which the credit crunch has become a major cause of concern for the loan industry and for the for-profit higher education sector (which are pressuring Congress and the Education Department to act to ease it) but largely played down by many traditional college officials, advocates for students, and the generally Democratic politicians with whom they are traditionally aligned
“Students with poor credit ratings, particularly those at trade schools whose graduates have poor repayment track records, might be unable to find a willing private student loan provider,” the New America Foundation’s Education Policy program wrote on its blog this month. “All students, however, who apply for a private student loan with a creditworthy co-signer should be able to obtain a loan and obtain it at a lower interest rate than they otherwise would receive. Private student loan borrowers who don’t have a creditworthy co-signer and who are pursuing academic programs at schools with dubious job placement and loan repayment track records should consider lower cost education options
The idea suggested in the New America post — that the credit crunch isn’t a major problem because it is affecting mostly students at for-profit colleges, and should actually prod students who take out costly private loans at for-profit schools to enroll instead in community colleges or other lower-cost institutions — has been a subtext of some of the discussion surrounding the credit crunch, and reveal just how differently the crisis is perceived in various quarters.
The divisions were on full display Tuesday as representatives from Congress and the Education Department spoke to the Career College Association’s annual policy forum in Washington. As a panel of Congressional aides addressed the presidents, government relations officers and other leaders of for-profit technical and career-oriented institutions for what was supposed to be a general discussion of the Washington scene, most of the conversation revolved around the group’s concerns about the availability of loans for their students were palpable, and on their hopes that politicians might act to ease the crunch, perhaps by increasing limits on how much a student can borrow in federal loans.
J.D. LaRock, a top education aide to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, said Congressional leaders were paying close attention to the developing situation in the loan market (a view echoed by aides to Sen. Michael B. Enzi and Rep. Howard P. McKeon) but played down the impact so far. “We have to deal with the facts at hand,” he said. While there “have been some changes in the federal loan arena,” he said, noting decisions by the College Loan Corp. and Pennsylvania’s student loan guarantor to stop making federal loans, “there remain well over 2,000 players in the [Family Federal Education Loan Program] market place.... The credit crunch has affected private loans most of all.”
When Arthur Keiser, president of Keiser Collegiate System, characterized the credit crunch as a “meltdown” of the student loan market place, and another audience member suggested that Congress should be “proactive rather than reactive,” LaRock bristled.
He noted that Kennedy was working closely with the Senate Banking Committee to monitor the burgeoning instability in the credit markets and that the House education panel plans a hearing on the loan situation this Friday, and he announced that Kennedy would hold a hearing of his panel in Boston on March 17. He also acknowledged that Kennedy and his aides had begun discussing steps that Congress might take if the situation grew worse, including “expanding federal loan eligibility if [students] can’t get private loans.” (Although that tidbit of news intrigued the crowd, LaRock said he could provide no additional details about the possible legislative proposal, such as to what kind of loans — unsubsidized, a new form of parent loans for independent students — access might be expanded.)
“It’s being proactive to think about expanding loan eligibility and to work with the Banking Committee,” LaRock said. “But it’s also important to be very careful about recognizing the realities of the situation we find ourselves in, which sometimes departs from the rhetoric we find ourselves hearing.”
When it was her turn to speak to the career college meeting, Diane Auer Jones, assistant U.S. secretary for postsecondary education, also characterized the credit crunch as a potential rather than existing crisis. While emphasizing that department officials are “monitoring it very carefully — we’re reading the same newspapers, hearing the same concerns,” she said that at this point in time, we haven’t had a single institution say, ‘No, we don’t have a lender.’ We haven’t had a single student say, ‘No, I don’t have a [federal] loan.’ “
Comments like that did not resonate with many of the career college officials and their supporters, who believe they and their students have been hurt, but they veered between noting the powerful impact their institutions were feeling and warning that it would be a mistake to characterize the credit crunch as limited to their sector.
“One reason why this credit crisis is so huge for us is because we’re dealing with a lot of nontraditional students, independent students,” many of whom have already been extended credit for their homes or other purposes, said Mark Dreyfus, president of ECPI College of Technology, in Virginia. “On top of the fact that federal financial aid is skewed to traditional students, now they cannot get credit” to pay for their educations, either.
“Is it an acceptable policy outcome for Sen. Ted Kennedy for students attending career colleges to have their educational plans disrupted, often in mid-program, because of the lack of availability of student loans?” John Dean, a lawyer who represents the Consumer Bankers Association, asked rhetorically (LaRock had already left the meeting).
Dean warned that just because the impact of the credit crunch on federal loans (and therefore on many traditional nonprofit colleges) had been mild so far, that could change in a snap. Barring a major turnaround in the credit markets (which the Federal Reserve took steps Tuesday to try to bring about), he predicted “dramatic announcements in the next month” in which lenders might announce that they were, for instance, toughening their criteria for awarding federal loans (in ways that could affect other institutions with large numbers of low-income students more prone to default on loans, such as historically black and community colleges). Perhaps only when those institutions start to have their students affected, Dean said, will a “broader array of voices” be raised to urge Congress and the Bush administration to take steps to bolster the loan programs.
Mark L. Pelesh, executive vice president for legislative and regulatory affairs at Corinthian Colleges Inc., said that many institutions face a problem with financing the “gap” between what federal student aid covers and a student’s college payments. As available loan capital shrinks, he said, “I believe it will affect all institutions, all types, sizes, missions. Elite institutions may be able to manage this, but I believe the problem of financing this gap, coupled with the collapse of the lending market for lower-income students ... is not just a for-profit or proprietary school issue. There are HBCU’s, private not-for-profit institutions that have a more substantial gap than many proprietary schools do. All of them will be facing this problem.”
And yet, Dean asked, “Have you heard from the other sectors of higher ed? ... You don’t have independent colleges knocking on the doors of Congress saying you need to do something. But I can tell you that their anxiety is very high.”
Nonprofit colleges may have been publicly quiet, but Dean is right that for some of them, especially tuition-dependent private institutions without huge endowments, concern is indeed growing.
The National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities is surveying its members now about “if they do or don’t have a problem” with loan availability, said Sarah A. Flanagan, vice president for government relations and policy development at the private college group. “It is serious enough that people are responding; there’s definitely a lot of nervousness, because we’re all reading the same papers.”
David B. Laird, president of the Minnesota Private College Council, said the credit crunch is beginning to have an impact for families with college students in the Midwest. “We’re just beginning to see students that aren’t making the credit score thresholds and are not able to use any kind of co-signer within the family, mostly with private loans but also with unsubsidized federal loans,” he said.
The big crush for Minnesota’s private colleges, he fears, could come “when the FFEL lenders run out of capital later this spring” if they are unable to find investors to finance a new round of loans for the fall. Anticipating that eventuality, Laird said, some colleges are “signaling to families, ‘Get your loan applications in now during the spring, while [the lenders] still have their capital

Right now, many institutions aren’t quite sure what to expect, and they’re not necessarily getting good information from the lenders they work with, Laird said. “Put yourself in the position of being a lender marketing rep. Until you know you’re running out of capital, you’re not going to tell anybody the bad newsLaird said he understood that career college officials might be frustrated that their nonprofit peers were not joining them in sounding an alarm about the credit crunch. But “most responsible people [in the traditional college sectors] are waiting until they see pretty significant signs of problems before they put the red flag up,” he said. “I think they’re actually being responsible. No doubt they’re anxious and on edge, but I give them credit for the fact that they’re not standing on the top of the hill and yipping about it” to Congress or the Education Department.
“For everybody except the proprietary sector, the need is not well enough defined for us to expect them to act yet
 

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