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Selecting a Financial Aid Package That You Can Live with

In this day and age, it is rather uncommon for a person to attend college and pay for it entirely out of their own pockets. No matter what the college major, it seems that a college degree cannot be attained without at least having to take out one small loan. That is just the simple truth, and it is important for students to understand that financial aid plays a huge role in the college application process. Very few students can get by without at least a small portion of financially, and so it is important if you and to select the school is offering the best financial aid package and the best education, or some combination of the two.

Make Sure to Stay Realistic

Only select a financial aid package that you can realistically afford. Just because the school is closer does not mean it is worth having to borrow an extra thirty thousand when there is a school out there that is perfectly willing to grant you any or all of that money on a free basis. The financial aid package to a particular school has offered you are likely to be the same package that they will offer you for the subsequent years that you will be a student there. If it says you're going to have to borrow x amount of dollars the first year, chances are that you are going to have to for three or four more years afterwards.


 


Examine Your Options

Just because a certain school's financial aid package offers you work study does not mean you have to get a work-study job, it just means that you are approved for one. There are things that you can do in place of that form of financial aid, such as take out a loan, but decide what your most logical option is. Will your college major afford you time to work? If not, then you might want to examine your college admissions decision and see what other school you want to attend with a better package or replace that work-study with a loan, if possible.

Consider Your Career Prospects

You are going to school to get a degree; hopefully that is to get a job. If you can afford to pay back the loans after you finish medical school, that is all well and fine but make sure that that is what you want to do and that you will definitely finish before you accrue $100,000 in student loans for no reason.




 
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