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Daily Aid 3: Inducements, Student Loans, Outside Scholarships

September 5th, 2008 - Comments

Daily Aid 3: Inducements, Student Loans, Outside Scholarships

Student Financial Aid News

NASFAA and the New York Times:

“The attorney general of New York is preparing a lawsuit against a student loan company, Goal Financial, charging that the lender broke state and federal laws by luring borrowers with iPods, cash and other gifts and that it misled consumers about loan terms and benefits, said a senior official in the office,” The New York Times reports. “The attorney general, Andrew M. Cuomo, has been investigating the student loan industry since early last year and has uncovered an array of troubling practices. Separate from the Goal lawsuit, the office is close to agreements with about a dozen loan companies on what marketing tactics are appropriate, according to the official, who cited the investigation and the pending lawsuit as reasons he could not be identified. ‘The hope is that those settlements will set a new industry standard when it comes to how direct-to-consumer lenders are operating,’ the official said. Goal is being sued because it has failed to demonstrate a willingness to change its practices, he added.”

Commentary

The article’s a little unclear about the issue of inducements. Inducements, if you weren’t tuned into the Financial Aid Podcast, are promotions like free iPods, phones, etc. - anything given to a student or a financial aid administrator in exchange for loan applications. In the article, it was unclear whether or not Goal was using inducements for federal or private student loans; inducements are illegal for any form of federal student loans, whether they’re new loans like the Stafford loan or the PLUS loan, or consolidation of existing student loans, or private, non-government student loans. Inducements, while not a recommended practice, were not illegal for private student loans until recent legislation.

Corporate disclosure, of course, the Student Loan Network has not and never will use inducements as a promotional method.

What this means for you is fairly straightforward - no student loan company should be using inducements of any kind, bartering goods for your business. If you see a company doing that, it’s illegal. That said, there’s a distinction in how the law is written. Inducements have to be quid pro quo, or “this for that”. A company can give away free iPods, etc. as long as there is no expectation of business generated, or a contract that binds you, meaning that a legal obligation to do business with that company was created because you took the free item. What some other student loan companies are being sued for is essentially requiring you to sign a binding legal contract - a student loan application - for a trade good, especially if the value of the freebie is disproportionate to the contract’s value.

Scholarship of the Day

The ZoomPanel $1,000 scholarship: Every ScholarshipPoints member can enter this monthly drawing only once! With only a small percentage of our members competing your chances of winning have never been better. The whole thing takes under 10 minutes and you must be over 18 to enter. At the end of the month you’ll be emailed your special code for 25 points.

Details at our free scholarships web site, ScholarshipPoints.com

Mail Bag

Chris - I’m a bit confused. You’ve consistantly said students should apply for as many scholarships as possible, but some sources (ex. book - What parents don’t want you to know - or something like that) and some colleges, say that any outside scholarship money reduces the grant they will give. Nothing seems to help the EFC or the student’s amount of loans if grants are offered. Just seems to reduce the college’s part. The 529 savings plans seem the same. Am I getting this right? So where is the benefit to the student/parent? Thanks. Helen

Helen, you’re absolutely right that outside funding sources do count against institutional aid. Every dollar that you bring in from outside sources reduces what the university has to find and contribute. Outside scholarships also alter the EFC, the expected family contribution, because they essentially count as a form of cash that your family has at its disposal to pay for school.

How a school’s financial aid office handles outside scholarships when it comes to your financial aid award varies from school to school. The very best school financial aid offices will, in your award letter, reduce loans that are in your package with the outside scholarship money, so that the total cost of your college education is lower. Other schools will indeed reduce their institutional grants with the outside scholarship money instead. How a financial aid office handles outside scholarships in your award letter largely depends on how much money the school has and the philosophy of the financial aid director. Schools with very small aid budgets typically will be the ones to discount your grants, because they need to scrape together every dollar they can, and if you’re winning outside money, they can help other students. Wealthier schools who have an endowment will take away your loans and leave your grants because they have the funds to draw on.

What will your school do? You’ll have to ask your financial aid office and check your award letter.


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Reminders
+
+ Financial Aid Podcast Show Notes at FinancialAidPodcast.com.
+ Free scholarship search secrets eBook at StudentScholarshipSearch.com/ebook
+ Free college scholarships contests!
+ Open an FDIC-insured savings account today!
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com
+ Parent PLUS loans at ParentPLUSLoan.com
+ Graduate student loans at GradLoans.com
+ Private student loans available at any time - visit AlternativeStudentLoan.com
+ Private student loan consolidation at StudentLoanConsolidator.com
+ FAFSA form tutorials and free help at FAFSAonline.com
+ The Financial Aid Podcast is a publication of the Student Loan Network.

I want to hear from you! Send me your comments, questions, and feedback using this handy contact form!

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First look at Student Loan Network sites in Google Chrome

September 2nd, 2008 - Comments

Google’s new web browser, Chrome, came out today at 3 PM. Here’s how the site renders…

Podcast

Looking good!

Let’s see what Student Loan Network sites you can find using common student loan terms.

Parent PLUS loans:

PLUS loans in Google Chrome

Stafford loans:

Stafford loans in Google Chrome

Student loan consolidation:

Student loan consolidation in Google Chrome

Not bad - a few of our other services aren’t the Chrome-recommended choice, but glad to see a good number of our sites as recommended choices in Google’s new Chrome browser.

Other first impressions - this thing is FAST. Very snappy, much faster than Firefox or IE in my Windows XP installation. I got a kick out of the titles in the preferences:

Google Chrome Settings

It’s a great metaphor that gives a clear mental image of what’s about to open up.

Other neat things - it comes with Google Gears pre-installed, but Google didn’t auto-approve their own sites, which is nice. It also doesn’t come with Flash built in, but it does download the plugin and install it without a browser restart, which is also nice.

This I thought was kind of weird:

Report bug

You can report to Google broken web pages. I wonder - if enough people report, does Chrome ignore the site? Change its recommendations? Inquiring minds want to know.

Other fun stuff - check out the stats!

Chrome Stats

And finally this interesting tidbit - Google Chrome can create applications on your desktop of web apps, making them function like regular programs on your computer.

Gears app shortcut

App shortcuts

Kudos to Google for this release.


5 most recent Financial Aid Podcast posts

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+ Click here to subscribe by email
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+ Click here to add the Financial Aid Podcast to Google Reader or your Google Homepage

Reminders
+
+ Financial Aid Podcast Show Notes at FinancialAidPodcast.com.
+ Free scholarship search secrets eBook at StudentScholarshipSearch.com/ebook
+ Free college scholarships contests!
+ Open an FDIC-insured savings account today!
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com
+ Parent PLUS loans at ParentPLUSLoan.com
+ Graduate student loans at GradLoans.com
+ Private student loans available at any time - visit AlternativeStudentLoan.com
+ Private student loan consolidation at StudentLoanConsolidator.com
+ FAFSA form tutorials and free help at FAFSAonline.com
+ The Financial Aid Podcast is a publication of the Student Loan Network.

I want to hear from you! Send me your comments, questions, and feedback using this handy contact form!

Visit FinancialAidPodcast.com for more!

FAP871: State FAFSA deadlines, broadband scholarship, job references

August 28th, 2008 - Comments

FAP871: State FAFSA deadlines, broadband scholarship, job references

Listen now:

Student Financial Aid News
+ Forbes: “Corinthian Colleges is boosting its profits by increasing student enrollment, but the downside for the for-profit operator of North American colleges and trade schools is that it now expects an increased number of defaults,” Forbes reports. “‘During the fourth quarter, we implemented several changes to offset the loss of Sallie Mae privates tudent loans for students with subprime credit profiles. We established a new company-sponsored student lending program, ACCESS, and thus far, have arranged financing for the vast majority of students through Title IV, cash payments, ACCESS and other resources,’ said Corinthian Colleges Chief Executive Officer Jack Massimino. Corinthian said student loan defaults increased to 9.1% of revenue in the fourth quarter vs. 6.2% in the prior year. Revenue for the quarter rose 18.3% to $274 million, from $231.6 million a year earlier, below analysts’ expectations of $276.6 million.”
+ Boston Globe: For most students, college is a four-year rite of passage - a time to dabble in multiple subjects before settling on a major or a chance to spend a semester abroad - with frat parties sprinkled in between, That’s a luxury some students say they can no longer afford. Soaring tuition costs are prompting a small but growing number of students to compress their college careers into three years and, in the process, save their parents and themselves tens of thousands of dollars. The crop of early graduates often comes from middle-class families who might not qualify for need-based financial aid, college officials say.
+ Some policies adopted by local colleges can make it easier to graduate early. Suffolk University introduced online courses this summer to help working students squeeze in extra credits at their own pace. Berklee College of Music allows students who test out of classes to receive credits for those classes, at no charge. Like some other schools, Wellesley College offers classes during semester breaks.

Scholarship Update
+ Broadband Changed My Life Scholarship
+ The goal of the Alliance for Public Technology’s national Broadband Changed My Life! campaign is to raise awareness of the benefits of advanced broadband and encourage its universal deployment and adoption.
+ Now you can enter the new Tell the Next President Contest! Stories should be 50-300 words ideally, although they can be longer. The focus is to share the story of how high-speed internet access has changed your life and your family members’ lives, or how you would like to see broadband used to change the lives of others.
+ The deadline for entries is October 1, 2008. Three winners will be announced in late October and the prizes will be $1,000 for first place, $500 for second place and $250 for third place. A panel of APT Board members and staff will judge the entries. Early next year, a memorandum with the best contest entries will be sent to the new President and the first place winner will receive a trip to Washington and a ticket to an Inaugural ball.
+ Details at our free college scholarship search site

Mail Bag
+ Hi. My name is Cecilia and I began college last year without financial aid, which was a mistake. Now I am interested in filling a fafsa form out but my state’s(california) deadline was januray 1 to march 2,2008. Does that mean I am too late? And if my mother claimed me for her taxes in 2007 and she is a nurse but now I am living with my father and he can only pay some of the tution. Also he has been claiming me most of my life. Does that also mean I have to wait till 2009? Thank you for your time. Please try to help with my questions because I’m very confused.
+ File your FAFSA anyway - it’s free!
+ State deadlines are different than federal deadlines - at the least, you’ll be able to get some Stafford loans
+ State deadlines only affect state financial aid like the CalGrant
+ Whoever you lived with more than 50% of tax year 2007 is the claimant on the FAFSA for this year’s FAFSA
+ On January 1, the 2009 FAFSA opens up for the 2009-2010 school year and whoever you lived with more than 50% of 2008 is the claimant

Jobcast
+ Recommendations are critical to the success of a resume portfolio
+ Think of these as short references - testimonials
+ Gather them in places like LinkedIn
+ Gather them the old-fashioned way, too
+ Ask for recommendations diplomatically but earnestly
+ Ask for recommendations with details if possible and appropriate
+ Bad: John did a fine job as our summer intern. I’d recommend him for the future.
+ Good: John did a fine job as our summer intern, handling customer service issues and helping to keep our loan applications on track, especially when it came to calling back customers.
+ Great: John did a fine job as our summer intern, handling customer service issues and helping to keep our loan applications on track, especially when it came to calling back customers. He managed to call back a record 267 customers in just 10 days and closed 44 loans entirely by himself.

Direct MP3 file download: Click here to download the MP3


5 most recent Financial Aid Podcast posts

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Did you enjoy this? If so, please consider subscribing for free to get it delivered to you. Subscribing for free means you don’t have to remember to download it every day.
+ Click here to subscribe by email
+ Subscribe in iTunes
+ Click here to add the Financial Aid Podcast to Google Reader or your Google Homepage

Reminders
+
+ Financial Aid Podcast Show Notes at FinancialAidPodcast.com.
+ Free scholarship search secrets eBook at StudentScholarshipSearch.com/ebook
+ Free college scholarships contests!
+ Open an FDIC-insured savings account today!
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com
+ Parent PLUS loans at ParentPLUSLoan.com
+ Graduate student loans at GradLoans.com
+ Private student loans available at any time - visit AlternativeStudentLoan.com
+ Private student loan consolidation at StudentLoanConsolidator.com
+ FAFSA form tutorials and free help at FAFSAonline.com
+ The Financial Aid Podcast is a publication of the Student Loan Network.

I want to hear from you! Send me your comments, questions, and feedback using this handy contact form!

Visit FinancialAidPodcast.com for more!

FAP869: College costs, usury, Stafford loan caps

August 26th, 2008 - Comments

FAP869: College costs, usury, Stafford loan caps

Listen now:

Student Financial Aid News
+ A number of articles from around the web including this one from the Baltimore Sun ask if college is being priced out of affordability, especially in an economic downturn
+ Yes, it is. Plain and simple, college is getting out of reach, especially with a lack of availability for some private student loans for students and parents with less than perfect credit
+ What should we do about this? Instead of making expensive colleges more affordable, create more affordable colleges. College pricing is an issue of supply and demand. There are two fundamental ways to move prices downwards. Reduce demand or increase supply. If everyone wants corn, and only a few people sell it, they can charge whatever they want. If a few people want corn and everyone sells it, you’d be hard pressed to make a profit.
+ The long term answer is to create more educational opportunities. More community colleges, more public schools, more for-profit institutions with sustainable revenue models, but more education in general. If you can create more of the most affordable kinds of education, it will bring down prices across the board.
+ As boring as it might sound, I would encourage every college student - heck, everyone in general - to read Economics for Dummies to get a clearer understanding of market forces, and why the free market works when you let it. Right now, we’re trying to game the free market by using taxpayer dollars and Wall Street investments to reduce a price without changing supply or demand, which does not work. Any time you have a third party subsidizing the cost of a good, the cost of the good goes up because the producers have no incentive to set pricing according to what the market will bear.

Scholarship Update
+ Cappex $1,000 Fashion Design Scholarship
+ To be eligible for this scholarship, you must have a high school diploma or GED and be currently enrolled in college or plan to enroll within the next 12 months. You also must explain to Cappex why you deserve this scholarship in the “Tell Us More” box at the bottom of the application. Application deadline is November 30, 2008. One award will be granted. Good luck!
+ Details at our free college scholarship search site

Mail Bag
+ Dallas writes in on episode 854: is the amount $5,500 in Stafford loans for 1 or 3 years?
+ 1 year - that’s the first year student Stafford loan cap
+ JJ Writes in on some commentary from February:
+ Where (on the web) can I go to see how the legislators voted?
+ Without forgiveness of student loan debt, have the legislators created a debtors prison for those who cannot repay? (At least, then, there would be an end in sight.)
+ How many college graduates have moved out of this country to avoid loan payments?
+ Who regulates the usury the loan companies charge?
+ You can always check legislative action on the Library of Congress.
+ We don’t know on the third question
+ Usury laws are governed on a state by state basis. Each state sets the legal definition of usury. No student loans of any kind currently fit the definition of usury as set in any of the states
+ Banks are exempted due to legislation from the 1980s. They’re indexed to commercial market rates.
+ If a lender charges above the lawful interest rate, a court will not allow the lender to sue to recover the debt because the interest rate was illegal anyway. In some states (such as New York) such loans are voided ab-initio.

Did you enjoy today’s show? If so, please consider subscribing for free to get it delivered to you. Subscribing for free means you don’t have to remember to download it every day.
+ Click here to subscribe by email
+ Subscribe in iTunes
+ Click here to add the Financial Aid Podcast to Google Reader or your Google Homepage

Direct MP3 file download: Click here to download the MP3

Reminders
+
+ Financial Aid Podcast Show Notes at FinancialAidPodcast.com.
+ Free scholarship search secrets eBook at StudentScholarshipSearch.com/ebook
+ Open an FDIC-insured savings account today!
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com
+ Parent PLUS loans at ParentPLUSLoan.com
+ Graduate student loans at GradLoans.com
+ Private student loans available at any time - visit AlternativeStudentLoan.com
+ Private student loan consolidation at StudentLoanConsolidator.com
+ FAFSA form tutorials and free help at FAFSAonline.com
+ Get FAFSA news at the FAFSA blog

+ The Financial Aid Podcast is a publication of the Student Loan Network.

I want to hear from you! Email me at financialaidpodcast {at} gmail {dot} com, visit http://www.FinancialAidPodcast.com, or call 206-350-1208.

Visit FinancialAidPodcast.com for more!

FAP849: MEFA Private Student Loan troubles, dwindling scholarships

July 29th, 2008 - Comments

FAP849: MEFA Private Student Loan troubles, dwindling scholarships

Listen now:

Student Financial Aid News
+ MEFA shuts down lending for the fall semester - see the video from WGBH, MEFA Student Loan Troubles
+ 40,000 students, parents, and families, over $500M
+ If you had MEFA student loans in the past, or were planning to take out a MEFA private student loan, the Student Loan Network may be able to help - call us at 877-328-1565 or visit www.StudentLoanNetwork.com
+ A disturbing trend I don’t have metrics for yet - the number of scholarships that are not renewing. When you Google them, it’s last year’s page and there’s a note saying the award has been discontinued or is pending review.
+ As the economy trends downward, scholarships may become harder to find - so get cracking.

Scholarship Update
+ The Jesse Brown Memorial Youth Scholarship Program encourages young volunteers to play active roles in the Department of Veterans Affairs Voluntary Service (VAVS) programs. It recognizes outstanding young volunteers who give of their time by awarding annual scholarships that may be used to continue their education. The Disabled American Veterans has awarded 87 scholarships worth $578,000 since the inception of the Jesse Brown Memorial Youth Scholarship Program in 2000.
+ Scholarships can be awarded to any volunteer who is age 21 or younger and has volunteered for a minimum of 100 hours at a VA medical center during the previous calendar year. All volunteer hours must be credited to the Disabled American Veterans.
+ Scholarships can be used at any accredited institution of higher learning; to include universities, colleges, community colleges, vocational schools, etc.
+ Scholarships must be utilized in full prior to the recipient attaining the age of 25, or within 6 years of receiving the scholarship, whichever is later.
+ Immediate family members of the DAV national organization are eligible to receive a scholarship.
+ Nominations for this award may be submitted by the Voluntary Service Program Manager at the VA medical center, DAV Department Commander, or the student may complete a self-nomination form which is available on-line. If you are submitting your own nomination, please include an essay discussing “What volunteering at a VA medical center means to you.” (Essay should be 750 words or less).
+ All nomination packets should include a nomination form, essay, and any supporting documentation which you would like to have considered by the Selection Committee.
+ Deadline February 25
+ Awards up to $15,000
+ Details at our free college scholarship search site

Mail Bag
+ My name is Nancy and I am from Germany. I just lived in the US for about 10 months as an Exchange Student and now I am back in Germany to finish up High school here but I would love to be back soon and to attend college in IN that would be awesome. I looked through the website and I am not sure if there are any scholarships with 100% tuition for international students? I really want to come back to the states and go to college there but I don’t have the money so right now it is not possible for me!
+ Very, very few - Fulbright scholars programs, etc. where you have to be the very best of the best
+ Check out InternationalScholarships.com and InternationalStudent.com
+ Michelle writes in: Hello! What a fantastic podcast! I have been an avid listener for awhile now. As an incoming graduate student this fall 08 I have come across some financial aid stress over the summer. I cannot express how much appreciation I would have if someone could give me advice about this situation.
+ It is now the end of July 08 and I still have not received my financial aid award. I call the office approx every two weeks asking when it will be awarded. Their answer is “sometime between June and August.” Apparently my file is up to date, and they say the paperwork just needs to be processed by their financial officer. My student bill needs to be paid by August 18, 2008.
+ I have already chosen a lender for student loans, so I am just waiting on my award. Do you happen to know the turnaround time for a loan to be processed? Some ppl say a month and I am worried that my bill will not be paid in time. Should I be worried about this? Again, I appreciate any advice. Great job Chris!!
+ Your school may do batch processing - typically, for federal student loans, the turnaround is whenever the school does certification, followed by disbursement
+ Make sure your financial aid office is communicating with the bursar’s office so that the billing folks know when the loan money is supposed to come in - call both
+ Mihoko writes in: Hey Chris, I think I have a similar question someone named Mercy asked you awhile ago. I’m a US citizen and I’ve been accepted to a foreign school outside the US. The school is not on the FAFSA list of approved foreign schools. Nor is it not on the list of the private student loan companies and banks I’ve talked to so far. Is there a way to get some kind of student loan with this dilemma? Thanks for all your help and I love your show.
+ Not really, until the school gets set up with either Title IV certification or set up with a private student loan lender. You could also explore a regular unsecured consumer loan that’s not a student loan, but that can be expensive. See if the school plans to pursue Title IV certification.

Did you enjoy today’s show? If so, please consider subscribing for free to get it delivered to you. Subscribing for free means you don’t have to remember to download it every day.
+ Click here to subscribe by email
+ Subscribe in iTunes
+ Click here to add the Financial Aid Podcast to Google Reader or your Google Homepage

Direct MP3 file download: Click here to download the MP3

Reminders
+
+ Financial Aid Podcast Show Notes at FinancialAidPodcast.com.
+ Free scholarship search secrets eBook at StudentScholarshipSearch.com/ebook
+ Open an FDIC-insured savings account today!
+ Private student loans available at any time - visit AlternativeStudentLoan.com
+ Student credit card information at StudentPlatinum.com
+ FAFSA form tutorials and free help at FAFSAonline.com
+ Financial Aid discussion forums
+ Get FAFSA news at the FAFSA blog
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com
+ The Financial Aid Podcast is a publication of the Student Loan Network.

I want to hear from you! Email me at financialaidpodcast {at} gmail {dot} com, visit http://www.FinancialAidPodcast.com, or call 206-350-1208.

Visit FinancialAidPodcast.com for more!

FAP848: How to shop around for student loans

July 28th, 2008 - Comments

FAP848: How to shop around for student loans

Listen now:

Student Financial Aid News
+ NY Times: Banks struggling to recover from multibillion-dollar losses on real estate are curtailing loans to American businesses, depriving even healthy companies of money for expansion and hiring.
+ Two vital forms of credit used by companies — commercial and industrial loans from banks, and short-term “commercial paper” not backed by collateral — collectively dropped almost 3 percent over the last year, to $3.27 trillion from $3.36 trillion, according to Federal Reserve data. That is the largest annual decline since the credit tightening that began with the last recession, in 2001.
+ There’s a bunch of banks that are distressed, but here’s an interesting sidenote - IndyMac, the bank that went bust a few weeks ago, wasn’t on the FDIC watch list at all, and even sites like BankRate.com fail to predict unstable banks.
+ In this kind of environment, keep deposits under the FDIC insurance limit, and if you’re trying to get a loan of any kind, make sure your credit is in top shape first, and expect to potentially be declined even with good credit, not because you did anything wrong, but because the bank you spoke to may be financially on the brink of failure
+ If you’re applying for student loans, federal student loans such as the Stafford loan and PLUS loan are your best bets for approval, as Stafford loans have no credit requirement and PLUS loans have relaxed requirements; both are backed by the federal government, which means banks may be able to sell them more easily.
+ NY Times: Comparison shopping for a private student loan? Doing so may damage your credit score. In few other areas of consumer life are you at risk of being penalized for seeking out the best deal. Indeed, mortgage and auto loan seekers who comparison shop within a relatively short period of time do not see their credit scores suffer. But Fair Isaac, the company that helps credit bureaus calculate credit scores, does not extend the same break to private student loan applicants or their parents, who often co-sign for loans.
+ While Fair Isaac has mined years of data to determine that people making a bunch of mortgage and auto loan applications over a short period are almost always innocently shopping for a loan, it hasn’t declared student loan shoppers similarly safe.
+ In the meantime, lenders could help a lot by doing the following: First, state on their Web sites which credit bureau or bureaus they are using. Then, state whether that credit bureau is classifying their requests in a way that could damage an applicant’s credit score.
+ For the record, the Student Loan Network primarily uses Experian, and to the best of our knowledge, because we work with major banking partners like Discover Financial Services (ticker: DFS), Lehman Brothers (ticker: LEH), etc., your credit score shouldn’t take any additional hits beyond the standard first hit when you begin shopping around.

Scholarship Update
+ Running a survey on our site, Student Scholarship Search. Please take a few moments.
+ Scholarship Points $1,000 drawing for July happens in just 3 days!

Financial Aid 101
+ Shopping around for student loans
+ For federal student loans like the Stafford and PLUS loan, thanks to the credit crunch and the CCRAA, there’s no fundamental difference among federal student loans any more. There used to be borrower benefits, but no one really has those any more. The only metrics left are things like customer service.
+ For private student loans, shop around primarily based on rates and benefits. Look for, obviously, the lowest rates available, but base this not on the best published rate, but the spread.
+ For example, our spreads are in the range of LIBOR + 3.5% to LIBOR + 7.75% (some variations) - that makes us not as good a deal if you have perfect credit but a pretty good deal if your credit isn’t perfectly spotless
+ Different lenders use different base rates - some use Prime instead of LIBOR, which lets them publish rates like Prime + 0%, which looks fantastically than LIBOR + 3.5%, until you dig in and find that PRIME + 0% is 5%, and LIBOR + 3.5% is 5.5%.
+ Compare fees, too. What’s the origination or guarantee fee?
+ Compare benefits - is there deferment? Forbearance?
+ There’s been a lot of talk about peer to peer lending, which tends to be a non-beneficial model. Peer to peer lacks the interest tax credit, since they’re not qualified education loans, so you lose that tax benefit. Some have very short repayment terms, 3 years, meaning you have to repay while you’re in school. Others have astonishingly high fees, especially if you have poor credit; Prosper has an average interest rate of 26.1% and for poor credit, 31.88% - which is worse than virtually every credit card out there. Some of these loans also don’t offer deferment or forbearance at all (as of July 28, 2008).

Did you enjoy today’s show? If so, please consider subscribing for free to get it delivered to you. Subscribing for free means you don’t have to remember to download it every day.
+ Click here to subscribe by email
+ Subscribe in iTunes
+ Click here to add the Financial Aid Podcast to Google Reader or your Google Homepage

Direct MP3 file download: Click here to download the MP3

Reminders
+
+ Financial Aid Podcast Show Notes at FinancialAidPodcast.com.
+ Free scholarship search secrets eBook at StudentScholarshipSearch.com/ebook
+ Open an FDIC-insured savings account today!
+ Private student loans available at any time - visit AlternativeStudentLoan.com
+ Student credit card information at StudentPlatinum.com
+ FAFSA form tutorials and free help at FAFSAonline.com
+ Financial Aid discussion forums
+ Get FAFSA news at the FAFSA blog
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com
+ The Financial Aid Podcast is a publication of the Student Loan Network.

I want to hear from you! Email me at financialaidpodcast {at} gmail {dot} com, visit http://www.FinancialAidPodcast.com, or call 206-350-1208.

Visit FinancialAidPodcast.com for more!

FAP790: The Fed, TAF, APA, and College Costs

May 5th, 2008 - Comments

FAP790: The Fed, TAF, APA, and College Costs

Listen now:

Student Financial Aid News
+ Did the Financial Aid Podcast alter Fed policy?
+ The Higher Education Act expired on Friday. How does this affect you? It doesn’t, really. Everything is still working.
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com

Scholarship Update
+ APA 20th Anniversary Psychology Scholarship
+ In celebration of APAGS’s 20th anniversary in 2008, APAGS will acknowledge four outstanding graduate psychology students who have demonstrated exceptional leadership in psychology and are on track to becoming future pioneers in the field. APAGS members who have demonstrated excellence in their work as leaders in research, practice, professional service, community service and/or legislative advocacy are eligible for this prestigious award. Four $5,000 scholarships will be awarded to graduate students who best represent future pioneering leaders of psychology. Candidates from diverse science and clinical training programs, as well as from diverse backgrounds, are encouraged to apply. In addition to the monetary award, winners will also receive travel funds (airfare through the APA Travel Office, plus reimbursement for 3 hotel nights) to attend the 2008 APA Convention in Boston to participate in a brief presentation of their work with the other award recipients.
+ All candidates must be APAGS members, currently enrolled (and in good academic standing) in a doctoral program in psychology. Winners must agree to attend the 2008 APA Convention in Boston to provide a brief presentation of their work and vision for the future of psychology in a program that features all of the winners. APAGS officers and/or subcommittee chairs are ineligible for this award.
+ Applications are due in APAGS Central Office no later than May 9, 2008.
+ Details in our free college scholarship search site

Opinion
+ In the past, there’s been some debate about whether financial aid drives college costs or vice versa. There’s a correlation between availability of financial aid, including student loans, and college costs, but it’s so far been unclear if there’s any causal relationship.
+ Here’s the twist on this story. As we’ve gone through the student lending crisis in the past few months, nearly every proposal on the table has talked about helping lenders gain access to more capital, to more cash. There have been all kinds of harebrained schemes dreamed up to fix student lending.
+ The one thing that no one has proposed is this - reducing college costs.
+ If college costs drove up financial aid, then logically you’d see costs change first, and aid follow
+ If financial aid drove up college costs, then logically you’d see aid change first, and then colleges change costs - and that’s exactly what I think we’re seeing
+ The housing market is a contrast - with no similar federal program for housing loans, the housing market is collapsing at an incredibly fast rate - costs coming down

Did you enjoy today’s show? If so, please consider subscribing for free to get it delivered to you. Subscribing for free means you don’t have to remember to download it every day.
+ Click here to subscribe by email
+ Subscribe in iTunes
+ Click here to add the Financial Aid Podcast to Google Reader or your Google Homepage

Direct MP3 file download: Click here to download the MP3

Reminders
+
+ Financial Aid Podcast Show Notes at FinancialAidPodcast.com.
+ Free scholarship search secrets eBook at StudentScholarshipSearch.com/ebook
+ Open an FDIC-insured savings account today!
+ Private student loans available at any time - visit AlternativeStudentLoan.com
+ Student credit card information at StudentPlatinum.com
+ FAFSA form tutorials and free help at FAFSAonline.com
+ Edvisors Jobs
+ Grad student? Get graduate financial aid information at the GradLoans.com blog!
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com
+ The Financial Aid Podcast is a publication of the Student Loan Network.

I want to hear from you! Email me at financialaidpodcast {at} gmail {dot} com, visit http://www.FinancialAidPodcast.com, or call 206-350-1208.

Visit FinancialAidPodcast.com for more!

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FAP727: CLC exits, Free Stuff Friday

February 1st, 2008 - Comments

FAP727: CLC exits, Free Stuff Friday

Listen now:

Student Financial Aid News
+ Chronicle: Fifty states, the federal government, and thousands of American colleges and universities are about to face a test of their commitment to higher education, at a time when the country is under economic stress and high-school graduating classes are about to crest.
+ While the official “recession” label has not been used, the news broke on Wednesday that the American economy slowed to a crawl in the last quarter of 2007, growing only 0.6 percent. That’s not the negative number of a recession, but a lower one than many economists expected.
+ HEWI: The College Loan Corporation (CLC), the 8th largest FFELP lender, has decided to exit the FFELP business, effective March 1, 2008.
+ In a statement to HEWI from Cary Katz, the company’s CEO, Katz states that “recent Congressional action has decimated the Federal Family Education Loan Program, essentially making it impossible for midsized companies like College Loan Corporation to participate in the federal loan marketplace. In addition, continuing disruptions in the credit markets have compounded the impact of the legislation. After careful consideration, College Loan Corporation will cease making new FFELP Loans on March 1, 2008. We will honor all second and third disbursements to our customers and continue to manage our existing loan portfolio.”
+ If you are a CLC customer or attend a school where CLC is the preferred lender, the Student Loan Network is happy to help you, too
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com
+ Parent PLUS loans at ParentPLUSLoan.com
+ Student loan consolidation at StudentLoanConsolidator.com
+ Private student loans at AlternativeStudentLoan.com
+ Personal finance first aid kit

Scholarship Update
+ Deadline April 15, 2008
+ Applicable Schools: Any regionally or nationally accredited college, university or vocational school.
+ Participants must maintain a blog at the ProgressiveU website during contest period in order to be eligible. Winners are based on total accumulated points as of June 30, 2008 with points awarded for each blog entry and comment accepted for posting to the website and for each read of a participants blog entries by members and visitors.
+ Contest begins February 15th, 2008 and runs through June 30, 2008. Users must be registered by April 15, 2008 in order to be eligible for this semester’s contest.
+ Details at our free college scholarship search site

Free Stuff Friday
+ Personal Task Manager for Windows
+ Sun Presentation Minimizer
+ Vidalia + Tor
+ PixelCryptor
+ Put Vista on a diet with vLite
+ Flickr on your desktop with 1001
+ 13 most overlooked tax deductions from Yahoo Finance

Did you enjoy today’s show? If so, please consider subscribing for free to get it delivered to you. Subscribing for free means you don’t have to remember to download it every day.
+ Click here to subscribe for free by email
+ Click here to subscribe for free in iTunes
+ Click here to add the Financial Aid Podcast to Google Reader or your Google Homepage

Direct MP3 file download: Click here to download the MP3

Reminders
+ Student Loan Network $10,000 Scholarship - Apply in 32 seconds or less!
+ Financial Aid Podcast Show Notes at FinancialAidPodcast.com.
+ Discuss this episode at the Financial Aid Forum!
+ Free scholarship search secrets eBook at StudentScholarshipSearch.com/ebook
+ FAFSA form tutorials and free help at FAFSAonline.com
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com
+ Student loan consolidation at StudentLoanConsolidator.com
+ Private student loans available at any time - visit AlternativeStudentLoan.com
+ The Financial Aid Podcast is a publication of the Student Loan Network.

I want to hear from you! Email me at financialaidpodcast {at} gmail {dot} com, visit http://www.FinancialAidPodcast.com, or call 206-350-1208.

Visit FinancialAidPodcast.com for more!

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FAP600: Free stuff Friday, Credit crunch, fly fishing scholarship, mail bag, Matthew Ebel

August 10th, 2007 - Comments

FAP600: Free stuff Friday, Credit crunch, fly fishing scholarship, mail bag, Matthew Ebel

Listen now:

Student Financial Aid News
+ Will credit crunch impact student loans?
+ Subprime and Alt-A mortgage loans going bad left and right
+ Affecting CDOs and ABS
+ Federal student loan rates are set by Congress
+ Private student loan rates are market driven, so if the market revises credit standards upwards or rates are pushed up by economic conditions, private student loans will be more expensive
+ Student loans in general are highly prized now on the securities markets because they’re not mortgages
+ Federal student loans are the most valued because they’re guaranteed by the government, making them lucrative, safe investments
+ Using home equity to pay for college? Check out PLUS loans for parents at ParentPLUSLoan.com
+ Chronicle: The U.S. Department of Education plans to question some colleges that give most of their student-loan business to one lender and might visit their campuses to obtain additional details about those arrangements, Education Secretary Margaret Spellings said on Thursday.
+ CNN talks some financial aid scams including financial aid seminars

Scholarship Update
+ The Theodore Gordon Flyfishers, Inc. Founders Fund Scholarship
+ This merit scholarship in the amount of $2,000 is offered annually in the name of the TGF founders, to a single recipient who has demonstrated excellence and outstanding dedication in a field of study that falls within an environmental field of a school or department.
+ Deadline April 2
+ $2,000
+ 3.5 GPA
+ Details at our free college scholarship search site

Mail Bag
+ Karen Cardoza calls in for episode 600
+ Bryan Person from New Comm Road calls in with a scholarship question
+ Check out the FAFSA filing tips at FAFSAonline.com

Free Stuff Friday
+ Sumatra PDF Viewer for Windows
+ Lifehacker’s Top 10 Free Icon and Wallpaper sources
+ FU Money
+ Setting up an apartment? Check out Floorplanner!
+ Google Cheat Sheet Power
+ The Rosetta Project free kids books
+ Zero Assumption Recovery for digital camera cards - Windows
+ Emergent Task Planner
+ Emergent Task Timer
+ TubeTV for the Mac
+ Migratr for Windows
+ ABC HD Streaming
+ Minesweeper, the Movie

Podsafe Music
+ Matthew Ebel, Every Color (Extended)
+ Virtual Hot Wings
+ Virtual Blue Cheese

Reminders
+ Join the Financial Aid Podcast Loyalists
+ Register for PodCamp Boston
+ Buy Virtual Hot Wings, the Matthew Ebel live bootleg album!
+ Private student loans available at any time - visit AlternativeStudentLoan.com
+ Stafford federal student loans at StaffordLoan.com
+ Student loan consolidation at StudentLoanConsolidator.com
+ FAFSA form tutorials and free help at FAFSAonline.com
+ Financial Aid Podcast Show Notes at FinancialAidPodcast.com.
+ The Financial Aid Podcast is a publication of the Student Loan Network.

Questions? Comments? Suggestions? Email me at financialaidpodcast {at} gmail {dot} com, visit http://www.FinancialAidPodcast.com, or call 206-350-1208. AIM: FinAidPodcast Add me to your iTunes by visiting http://www.FinancialAidPodcast.com/itunes/

Direct MP3 file download: MP3 file

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Sallie Mae Customer Service - a Podcast Listener Chat

May 2nd, 2007 - Comments

I had an hour long chat with a podcast listener today and got to essentially “listen” as they talked with their loan holder, Sallie Mae. I’ll publicly put out this plea: if you ever experience customer service like this from the Student Loan Network, please call me personally at (206) 350-1208. I never want us to be even remotely this bad.

Warning: this chat contains profanity and is inappropriate for anyone who wouldn’t be let into an R-Rated movie. More after the break.

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