ThatGuy wrote:Private student loans are the work of the devil, particularly because they cannot be discharged even in bankruptcy.
ThatGuy wrote:1. If you need more money than what is provided by parents and scholarships, get a part time job.
2. If that doesn't cover your costs, look into federally subsidized loans.
3. If you still need more money, you need to go to a cheaper institution. Private student loans are the work of the devil, particularly because they cannot be discharged even in bankruptcy.
g$$ wrote:ThatGuy wrote:Private student loans are the work of the devil, particularly because they cannot be discharged even in bankruptcy.
I disagree. My private student loans had by far the lowest interest rate at 2.75%. Some of my federal loans were at 8.5%. Honestly, I wish i had borrowed more from the private lender and less from the government. If you're going to take a loan then do yourself a favor and look at all the options.
z3r0c00l wrote:Go to a good state college and save your money, particularly for undergrad. The price premium on a fancy school is simply not worth it unless you can afford to pay.
ThatGuy wrote:1. If you need more money than what is provided by parents and scholarships, get a part time job.
2. If that doesn't cover your costs, look into federally subsidized loans.
3. If you still need more money, you need to go to a cheaper institution. Private student loans are the work of the devil, particularly because they cannot be discharged even in bankruptcy.
bottlecap wrote:I believe you have this backwards. It is the government guaranteed loans that are not (absent stringent circumstances) dischargeable in bankruptcy, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. Section 523(a)(8). I don't disagree that government-backed student loans are the work of the devil, though...
JT
P.S. I see where private loans are now also subject to the nondischargeability test. So you don't necessarily have it backwards, but forgot to include federal loans.
Federal Student Aid wrote:
- Code: Select all
Year Subsidized Limit
1st $3,500
2nd $4,500
3rd+ $5,500
Grad $0.00
Max $23,000
sapocanhoto wrote:The advice of "do what you love and the money will follow" is terrible advice. There are many areas where there just isn't much money to be had, no matter how good you are (like social work). If you still want to go into a career that is guranteed to have low pay, that's fine but you should make sure you don't take out any loans and accept the fact that you will probably always be poor (that's not the worst thing in the world, but don't complain about it later on when it was your choice).
I think certain passions are better suited to being hobbies or side jobs than full time employment, especially anything like writing novels or painting. If it takes off then you can make it your career, but until then you are going to need a day job.
This advice is not always true. If you are receiving need-based merit aid, you only have an x allocation a year that you can earn. Once you are earning more than this level, you might actually be cutting into your scholarships.ThatGuy wrote:1. If you need more money than what is provided by parents and scholarships, get a part time job.
NYBoglehead wrote:sapocanhoto wrote:The advice of "do what you love and the money will follow" is terrible advice. There are many areas where there just isn't much money to be had, no matter how good you are (like social work). If you still want to go into a career that is guranteed to have low pay, that's fine but you should make sure you don't take out any loans and accept the fact that you will probably always be poor (that's not the worst thing in the world, but don't complain about it later on when it was your choice).
I think certain passions are better suited to being hobbies or side jobs than full time employment, especially anything like writing novels or painting. If it takes off then you can make it your career, but until then you are going to need a day job.
Excellent post. It drives me crazy when people complain about the shape they are in financially when they went to the most expensive private school they could find and majored in the most useless subject they could find. The combination of the two is lethal.
). Academically smart does not always translate into having common sense. Today, that person is now in grad school trying to climb out of a very deep hole. 
brianbooth wrote:Vlaak,
I tell my friends to double major with one degree that is their dream and another that will be a fall-back even if it takes an extra quarter or semester. So that art appreciation degree isn't working out? Good thing they're always hiring accountaints!
Grt2bOutdoors wrote:NYBoglehead wrote:sapocanhoto wrote:The advice of "do what you love and the money will follow" is terrible advice. There are many areas where there just isn't much money to be had, no matter how good you are (like social work). If you still want to go into a career that is guranteed to have low pay, that's fine but you should make sure you don't take out any loans and accept the fact that you will probably always be poor (that's not the worst thing in the world, but don't complain about it later on when it was your choice).
I think certain passions are better suited to being hobbies or side jobs than full time employment, especially anything like writing novels or painting. If it takes off then you can make it your career, but until then you are going to need a day job.
Excellent post. It drives me crazy when people complain about the shape they are in financially when they went to the most expensive private school they could find and majored in the most useless subject they could find. The combination of the two is lethal.
Yes, but sometimes the receipient of the advice doesn't want to hear it. You were 17 once, you know you think you've got the world on a string and you know everything or you can figure it out as you go along. I gave a relative sound advice - after that I got the silent treatment while this person majored in arts after spending some serious moola (parents money plus loans) in a very well-known and highly ranked university only to come out working in a job that didn't break past 24K in a very costly NYC (in that field you have to go where the work is). Academically smart does not always translate into having common sense. Today, that person is now in grad school trying to climb out of a very deep hole.
centrifuge41 wrote:Figure out the system of how aid works. It's about waay more than just loans. Learn about FAFSA, CSS, EFC (Expected Family Contribution), need-based aid, loans, etc. and a lot more. Ideally, the parents and the high schooler should have been planning since middle school, or the very very beginning of high school. The system is a bit complicated and sometimes counter-intuitive.This advice is not always true. If you are receiving need-based merit aid, you only have an x allocation a year that you can earn. Once you are earning more than this level, you might actually be cutting into your scholarships.ThatGuy wrote:1. If you need more money than what is provided by parents and scholarships, get a part time job.
The short form is that it is pretty much impossible to pay less than the Expected Family Contribution. Only way is to make sure it is small from the outset - have parents put more money into IRAs, 401k, pay off the mortgage a bit, etc. Minimize assets in one's own name and have them with the parents' names instead.
Elite private institutions don't necessarily cost more than public schools. For a lower-middle class family, if their kid can get into Princeton, Harvard, et al, the family might actually be paying less than if the child attended a state flagship. Generally, the higher ranking (and larger the budget the school has), the more generous the need-based aid.
brianbooth wrote:Vlaak,
I tell my friends to double major with one degree that is their dream and another that will be a fall-back even if it takes an extra quarter or semester. So that art appreciation degree isn't working out? Good thing they're always hiring accountaints!
Default User BR wrote:brianbooth wrote:Vlaak,
I tell my friends to double major with one degree that is their dream and another that will be a fall-back even if it takes an extra quarter or semester. So that art appreciation degree isn't working out? Good thing they're always hiring accountaints!
I think you're badly under-estimating the amount of extra time (and money) to double major in disparate disciplines. I think you're badly under-estimating the amount of extra time (and money) to double major in disparate disciplines. Yes, you can use the courses from one degree to fulfill the non-degree requirements of the other, but there's a huge between taking into business courses as an art major, and taking a full load of courses. The local university requires 48 hours of business courses, with 36 hours of those upper division.
It's one thing to double up in say math and science, or computer science and engineering, where a lot of the courses will fulfill major requirements in each, and taking two separate paths at the same time. I was a "undecided" in my early days, but trying to follow English and Physics at the same time. When I got to junior level, I had drop one (English) and commit to the other. Even trying to double in Math was just too much.
Brian
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