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Navigate the College Process

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Presentation on theme: "Navigate the College Process"— Presentation transcript:

1 Navigate the College Process
10 Insider Tips to Navigate the College Process bb CollegeInsideTrack.com @collegeinsidetrack

2 Helps over 500,000 students per year with the transition to life after HS
Saves families an average of $22,478 per year off college sticker price

3 College is different than when we went to school

4 Quiz Since 1987, how much has tuition increased at the University of Minnesota? 28% 77% 215% 570% The numbers on my calculator don’t go that high

5 U of M Tuition Increase since ‘87
570% Private College Tuition Increase 686%

6 NYU: $70,444 Drexel University: $69,489 Sarah Lawrence U: $67,130 Carleton: $64,420 Macalester: $61,853 St. Thomas: $54,133 St. Ben’s (MN): $53,477 University of MN: $26,304

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8 as significant as college that people know so little about
There is no purchase as significant as college that people know so little about

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10 Average Family college debt: Includes student & family
$48,000+ in loans Includes student & family

11 What Will College Cost? 1986 annual cost: $ 5,000 to $13,000

12 Treat this decision like the major financial investment that it is.

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14 2 Types of Aid 1. Need-based aid 2. Merit aid

15 Expected Family Contribution (EFC)
2 Need-based aid forms FAFSA vs. CSS/Profile Expected Family Contribution (EFC)

16 Biggest Influencers of Financial Aid
Income from tax return Parent non-retirement assets Number of children in college Children’s assets and income (UGMA/UTMA, Grandparent donations)

17 Financial Aid Example:
Tuition/fees $ 38,000 Room and board $ 8,500 Books, supplies $ 1,500 Misc $ 2,500 Total annual cost $ 50,500 - EFC (FAFSA) $ 20,000 = Remaining Student Need $ 30,500 YOUR FINANCIAL PACKAGE: NOT met by the school (25%) $ 7,625 Total need school will meet (75%) $ 22,875 Student loan $ 5,500 Work Study $ 2,000 Parent Loan (PLUS) $ 5,500 Financial Aid $ 9,875 = Out-of-pocket costs $40,625 Sample of AGI = $50,000 Hamline – meet 75% of need Normal time-line Might get accepted in January, but no financials until March or April Commit May 1 Small window to negotiate – BUT DO NEGOTIATE My life is about to become consumed ONE OF REASONS FOR BACKLASH AGAINST EARLY ACTION WORST PART OF IT IS TIMING… Let’s look at how that “gifts/aid” line is determined…

18 Tip #1 If need-based aid is an option, move assets out of child’s name
Child 20% Parent rate is 5.64% 529 plans are assessed at parent’s rate, UGMA/UTMA at child’s rate

19 Tip #2 Review financial aid forms for accuracy
42% contain errors that cost a family money FAFSA-Your primary residence and your retirement are not counted as assets (CSS/Profile is different)

20 Merit Aid AP, PSEO, standardized test scores, GPA, sports, etc.

21 Tip #3 To get the most merit aid, spend the majority of your time finding the right college (not private scholarships)

22 40% 6% 7% 35% 11% Scholarship/Grant Sources Federal government
Employers 7% Private scholarships 35% State governments Colleges 11%

23 #1 mistake families make with merit aid?
Not all colleges offer merit aid!

24 Look for schools … 1. Offer merit aid
2. Where student would bring something special Grades and test scores in the top % Extra-curricular talents Gender or ethnicity Geographic diversity

25 Tip #4 Consider colleges in other states
50% of students attend college within 100 mi of home MN colleges have all the Minnesotans they want- 72% stay in MN Students have geographic “hook” by looking at colleges outside geographic area Location can cost families $15,000 a year

26 Tip #5 1 or 2 more points on the ACT or SAT can be worth $1,000’s
Goal is to be in top 25% of college’s scores Investment in test prep may be worth it Test optional - If student does poorly on standardized tests consider 800+ colleges that do not require them (

27 Anatomy of 1 College’s Merit Aid
Demonstrated Interest- $3,000 (Don’t be “stealth” candidate) Lives out of state-$2,000-$15,000 “A” in class-$62 for every “A” on transcript Rigorous class-$400 for every AP, IB, etc. Excellent letter of recommendation-$1,800 Increase ACT score-$425 for every point above avg. FAFSA-$1,800 for completing CSS/Profile-$2,500 for completing Essay-$1,100-8,500 for excellent essay Major- deduct $1.89 for every student admitted w/ same major (good news for philosophy majors!)

28 Tip #6 Show demonstrated interest
A growing number of schools say demonstrated interest is important Ways to show interest: Ask for materials, visit website, “like” school’s Facebook page

29 Another money source: Division III
Athletic scholarships - 2% chance of scholarship Men’s football Woman’s track 1,000,000 603,000 Number of players <29,000 9,888 Number of scholarships $13,000 $8,100 Average value Another money source: Division III ScholarshipStats.com

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31 Tip #7 Avoid un-manageable debt

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35 Subsidized Stafford Loans
Rate is fixed at 3.76% Interest does NOT accrue while student in college Unsubsidized Stafford Loans Rate is fixed at 3.76%. Rate likely to increase in future years Interest DOES accrue while in college PLUS (Parent) Interest is fixed at 6.31% Payment begins upon disbursement

36 Student Loan Debt – Monthly Payments
3.76% for 10 years: @ 6.31% 3.76% for 10 years: 3.76% for 10 years: $400 $450 $500 $563 $600 $675 We use software that allows them to… Recent client talked out of Miami for Music Education. Would need to make $70K to pay loan and minimal expenses. Only 58% of loans go toward college expenses!

37 Tip #8 Negotiate the financial aid award
Called an “appeal,” dirty little secret colleges don’t want you to know about Need a reason, e.g., a better offer from another college, family circumstance change, etc. Last year our appeals saved our clients an average of $7,883 per year ($31,532 over the 4 years)

38 Tip #9 Look for the right academic, social and financial fit
Look beyond local school and rankings

39 Frequent Mistakes! Consider ONLY LOCAL schools
Make an emotional decision Follow best friend or boyfriend/girlfriend Consider ONLY Prestige Accept the school’s first offer Failure to compare This slide summarizes the mistakes that we have observed families making, and it is important to review, because it truly articulates the challenges and issues that our service addresses. Common mistakes are: confining the college search to local area schools, making an emotional decision about a school (i.e.—friend attending there, the coach is nice, etc.), accepting the college’s first offer, failure to compare, create competition or negotiate. REMEMBER 33% of college freshmen transfer schools in the first year !!! 39

40 800 : 1

41 Common Myths It’s better to get good grades than take challenging courses You can’t get into a good college if you did poorly in ninth or tenth grade The standardized tests are more important than grades If you haven’t heard of a college, it can’t be very good

42 Common Myths (cont.) Your life will be ruined if you don’t get into your first choice You have a better chance of getting into professional or grad. school if you go to a university that has these grad programs State supported institution offer more financial aid than private colleges

43 Tip #10 Start the spring of 10th grade or ASAP
FAFSA change – will use financial data from 2 years prior starting with class of 2017 Research and then target schools based on predicted aid Give yourself enough time to retake ACT if needed

44 Please complete feedback form to request copy of PowerPoint or sign up for our e-newsletter (we are a spam-free zone!) Thank you for coming! We will provide 1 free hour of college consulting… please schedule tonight if you are interested!! Contact me anytime with questions!

45 Questions? CollegeInsideTrack.com Like us on Facebook!!!


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