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10.31.06 | Private (Alternative) Student Loans

Posted in Student Loans by David Bonvie

Nearly everyone would agree that a student should start with financial aid process with scholarships and Federal loans. But in this age of significant inflation in education, that often isn’t enough to cover tuition, room and board, books, etc. And some parents would prefer their children to take on more of the responsibility for paying their education. To meet these needs, both for-profit and not-for-profit lenders have significantly increased the availability of private (sometimes called alternative) student loans.

Unlike Federal loans, private loans are not guaranteed, so the lender is taking on more risk that the student may default. Therefore, these loans are more expensive that Federal loans (hence, why students should max out on Federal loans before applying for private loans). Despite their higher cost, private loans have grown on average 25% a year over the last five years and are expected to continue their very strong growth.

While no FAFSA is required for private loans, the lenders will look at your credit score and credit history to determine the risk associated with lending you money. As many students don’t have much of a credit history (or if they do, a very high credit score), it is important to have a credit-worthy co-signer on the loans. A credit-worthy co-signer will significantly increase the odds of your private loan application being approved.=

Many of these lenders offer up to $30,000-40,000 annually, capped at the cost of attendance minus other financial aid. These loans typically have a 10-30 year term depending on amount. They also have flexible repayment options, including 1) immediate repayment, 2) immediate payment of interest-only (defer principle), 3) or ability to defer both interest and principle while in school.

Undergraduates interested in private loans can learn more at www.acteducationloans.com.

Graduate students should visit www.gradloans.com for grad-specific private loans.

10.31.06 | GETTING STARTED

Posted in FAFSA by David Bonvie

f you are either already enrolled in college or just getting started there are a couple of basics that every college student should know especially if it helps them get money. First, you must remember to fill out your FAFSA. That is the Free Application for Federal Financial Aid. You can fill this out at www.fafsaonline.com or www.fafsaapplication.com. The Fafsa is based on your last years tax returns so make sure to have those updated before you start. If you are a procrastinator like most of us you want to guesstimate what you think your taxes are going to be. You are always able to update your information. You will not be able to proceed with the student loan process if you do not complete this first step. Remember your fafsa must be completed by june of the upcoming year. Follow this easy step and it should make the rest of the process for applying for student loans more manageable.

10.30.06 | How to make an informed decision

Posted in Consolidation, Why Consolidate by Kristin Morris

Countless times a day borrowers will phone us at the Student Loan Network complaining that they have been bombarded with information from different lenders offering all sorts of benefits and opportunities if they consolidate with their company. Borrowers seek out the Student Loan Networks advice on how they can make the best financial decision.

The Student Loan Network always advises that when you are deciding on a lender to consolidate your student loans with to make sure you educate yourself on what is necessary to achieve and maintain borrower discounts and rebates that they are offering. If a lender is offering a 1% interest rate reduction after so many on time payments to have the company put the terms in writing for you. Find out and understand all terms, conditions, requirements of your loan consolidation. Not educating yourself on this can cost you thousands of dollars in lost or added payments.

Another way to make an informed decision on which lender to consolidate with is to test the customer service staff. Give the company a quick phone call and pay close attention on how the customer service staff assists you. Also, you can send a short email and see how long it takes for the company to respond to your online inquiry. By performing this research you may find that certain lenders have better customer service than others. Customer service is a major deciding factor when selecting a company to consolidate your loans with.

It is important to have all the information to help you make an informed decision. The loan market is filled with lenders that range from very good companies to those who are inexperienced with the student lending industry to those who are just downright unethical. Remember that you signature of the consolidation application obligates you to the terms of the consolidation loan and that lender. Be certain that you know what is being offered and what you must do to obtain and maintain and benefits and whom you will be dealing with.

 

The Student Loan Network: Stafford Federal Student Loans, Parent PLUS Loans, Student Loan Consolidation, Private Student Loans, Education Loans/College Loans

10.30.06 | Other specialty Graduate level loans

Posted in Program Specific Graduate Private Loans by David Bonvie

In a previous post, we talked about Bar Exam loans for Law School students who have finished their courses but still need some money while studying for a Bar Exam. During this time, we understand how busy things are – you study study study and have no income yet you still need some money to pay for expenses such as living, books and more. In fact, taking the bar itself costs a few hundred dollars (depending on what state you are taking it in.) Along the lines of this Law school bar exam loan, GradLoans.com also offers verious residency loans for Medical. Residencies, again, are a lot of time and work with not a lot of cash flow coming in. For this GradLoans.com offers these residency loans – up to $15,000 and it can even help to cover relocation costs. This residency loan applies to dental and osteopathic medicine students, also. I was talking with a recent dental school graduate who had no idea this type of loan even existed – she indicated that during residency, she was low on funds and that this would have been a great option for her. Check out loans for medical, dental, and law school students!

10.27.06 | THE FAFSA BASICS

Posted in Uncategorized by David Bonvie

FAFSA: FREE Application for Federal Aid.

When applying for federal aid, filling out your fafsa is the first and most important part in determining whether or not your eligible for federal loans. You can download this free application on fafsa online . Remember this application should be free so if you see some sites out there that want to charge you for this beware. This application is based on you or your parents last year tax returns so have that info. handy to make the process go a little bit easier. When you have completed this process you should receive a Student Aid Report. (SAR). On this form it should tell you if and how much federal aid you have been awarded. This is not the last step however… Many get confused and think fafsa is the lender of the loan and the money is automatically disbursed to the school. If you are awarded pell grants or a perkins loan contact your school and if you are awarded a Sub or Unsub Stafford Loan you must then apply for that loan. I must reiterate that Stafford is not the name of the Lender it is simply the type of loan you are receiving. You can apply for this loan on Stafford Loan Further if you still feel confused you can always give one of our reps a call at the Student Loan Network… (877)328-1565.

10.26.06 | Spring Graduates Scramble To File Their Consolidation Appplications

Posted in Deadlines by Kristin Morris

Hot off the wire…

As spring 2006 college graduates approach the end of their six month federal student loan grace period, borrowers will be faced with repaying their federal student loans at a time when student loan debt has never been greater. Student loan consolidation holds out the promise for recent graduates to lower their monthly payments up to 60% and reap additional interest rate savings – but only if they act quickly, before their grace periods end.

Federal student loan consolidation is a refinancing program that combines multiple federal student loans into a single loan, fixes the variable interest rate, and lowers the monthly payment. Graduates can consolidate their federal student loans at any time after graduation, but the first six months after graduation gives graduates an additional discount of 0.6% off their interest rate. Consolidation has grown significantly over the past 12 months due to July 1st interest rate changes and legislative changes written to permit borrowers to consolidate with any lender they choose.

Jonathan Rudy, director of loan consolidation services at http://www.StudentLoanConsolidator.com recommends that 2006 graduates file their consolidation application immediately. “All 2006 spring graduates who have not consolidated their loans yet need to submit an application right away. The 0.6% interest rate discount for consolidating during their grace period translates into huge savings throughout the term of repayment. In one recent example, a student was able to save an additional $49 per month, which oer the life of their loan translated into an additional $17,640 in savings.” [1]

Mr. Rudy also states that college graduates are faced with a staggering financial burden after graduation. “With post-grad living expenses including moving costs, rent and car payments, student loan consolidation makes great financial sense for anyone trying to build a manageable budget. Having multiple large student loan payments each month only adds to the growing pile of bills – consolidation can cut monthly student loan payments in half.”

Christopher Penn, host of the popular Financial Aid Podcast internet radio show, commented, “Federal student loan consolidation with StudentLoanConsolidator.com is the ideal tool for managing your student loan payments. You need a couple of years after graduation to get on your feet financially, and being able to cut your loan payments in half while you’re getting started can be a huge advantage. Once you’re on your feet, you can make additional or larger payments with no early repayment penalties.”

Mr. Rudy encourages all student loan borrowers, including parents with federal PLUS loans, to file a free application for consolidation right away. Students and parents can visit http://www.StudentLoanConsolidator.com or call toll free (877) 328-1565 to learn more and apply.

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StudentLoanConsolidator.com is a service of the Student Loan Network, a multi-national education services company offering students options for managing the entire education life cycle, from getting into their college of choice to financing their education and beyond. The Student Loan Network is based in Quincy, Massachusetts. Visit them on the web at http://www.StudentLoanNetwork.com for more information.

[1] A student with $115,000 in federal student loans compared consolidation at 6.54% and 7.14% over a 30 year term.

10.26.06 | Federal Loans IV- Graduate Plus Loans

Posted in Student Loans by David Bonvie

A recent addition to the Federal Loan Program is the Graduate Plus Loan. This is a fixed interest rate loan for graduate students where the student is the borrower and not the parent! The graduate student is still required to fill out a FAFSA and it is strongly advised that the graduate student apply for both unsubsidized and subsidized in Stafford loans before applying for the Graduate Plus Loan. There are credit requirements for the Graduate Plus Loan however if the graduate student is denied the Graduate Plus Loan he or she can add a co-signer to help strengthen the application.

The Graduate student is eligible to borrow up to the cost of education less any financial aid they receive. Like the unsubsidized Stafford Loan, the Graduate Plus Loan is all unsubsidized. This means that the graduate student is responsible for interest that accrues on the loan during this period.

There are a number of repayment options for the Graduate Plus Loans including deferred repayment while the student is enrolled at least half-time in school.

The Gradaute Plus loan is a great opportunity for Graduate Students to borrow a low cost low that is backed by the federal government.

The Student Loan Network: Stafford Federal Student Loans, Parent PLUS Loans, Student Loan Consolidation, Private Student Loans, Education Loans/College Loans

10.25.06 | Post Law School?

Posted in Intro to Graduate Loans A to Z by David Bonvie

I recently received a comment from a law student asking about a loan to help with living expenses while studying for the bar exam. There are loans out there to help with this type of situation even though the student is not technically enrolled in school. Although the law school graduate can always turn to the school’s resources for help with loans; it is wiser for the student to do their own research, as schools tend to have relationships with certain banks; and they do not always hold the students best interest in the highest priority. Gradloans.com has a private loan section that allows you to choose a bar exam loan specifically; which means it is specifically geared for the applicant.

10.25.06 | Graduate School – how to pay?

Posted in Plus loans by David Bonvie

Here is an article talking about the difficulties paying for graduate school. I think it wonderfully shows the need for the new Graduate PLUS loan that began this year. The PLUS loan has lower, fixed rates as compared to private loans with higher, variable rates. In the long run, they cand save graduate student thousands of dollars.

Read the whole article here.

Graduate students seek loans as last resort for expenses

Wednesday, October 25, 2006
By Joe Smydo, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Lofton Durham has borrowed $20,000, worked during the summer and relied on his wife’s income to help make ends meet while doing his graduate work in the University of Pittsburgh’s theater department.

Yet he said the master’s and doctoral programs — six years of study in all — would have been unaffordable without the teaching fellowship and tuition waiver the department awarded him.

“My funding runs out in April ‘09, and that’s when I hope to be finished,” said Mr. Durham, 33.

Graduate and professional students have a fabled beg-borrow-or-steal existence. Mostly, worrisome research shows, they borrow. And most borrow more than Mr. Durham.

Because of the intensity of instruction and expensive lab work, graduate and professional programs cost more per year than undergraduate school.

Yet federal and state grant programs that assist undergraduates typically aren’t available to graduate students. Mom and dad may be tapped out after college, or unwilling to help finance the next leg of a child’s educational journey

The type of aid awarded to Mr. Durham is highly competitive and unavailable to most. Graduate and professional schools offer a limited number of assistantships, fellowships or work-study slots.

So, many of the nation’s growing number of graduate students take out multiple loans, perhaps accumulating more debt than they comfortably can handle. Alternatively, debt may dictate the course of a graduate’s career.

“One possible effect of the growth of debt is the declining number of new lawyers who enter government or public-interest jobs. Many of these jobs have starting wages of under $40,000 per year,” said the National Association of School Financial Aid Administrators based on a 2003 survey.

In another study, released this year, researcher Kenneth Redd reported that the cost of graduate and professional education climbed 65 percent from 1995-96 to 2003-04 at the same time the number of graduate and professional students grew by about 250,000.

Savvy students may hunt for special opportunities.

St. Vincent College offers alumni a 15 percent discount on graduate credits, financial aid director Thomas Ball said.

Some universities offer free graduate tuition to employees and their immediate families and have reciprocity agreements with other schools.

And some graduate students — more so in business and law programs than in medicine — go to school part-time so they can pay as they go.

Businesses may pay all or part of employees’ graduate tuition. Shari Payne, director of academic operations at Robert Morris University, said the school bills employers directly.

Still, loans accounted for more than 75 percent of the financial aid for graduate and professional students in 2002-03, the 2003 survey found. Doctoral students were not included.

On average, the study said, a person graduating from a master of arts or science program at a public university in 2003 had combined undergraduate and graduate debt of $24,809.

The so-called “cumulative debt” averaged $30,630 for MBA recipients at public schools, $54,025 for graduates of public law schools and $107,215 for graduates of private medical schools. Graduates of private dental schools had the highest cumulative debt, an average of $144,474, the study said.

Mr. Redd gave another snapshot of borrowing in his study, also for the financial aid administrators association. His study included doctoral students.

It found average cumulative debt of $27,702, $25,063 and $39,045, respectively, for master’s, MBA and doctoral-degree recipients at public schools; $51,230 for graduates of public law schools; and $108,844 for graduates of private medical schools. It did not give figures for dental schools.

Most loans come through the federal Stafford program, which offers $8,500 a year in subsidized loans. It also offers $10,000 a year in unsubsidized loans — the annual limit increases to $12,000 July 1 — to most graduate and professional students. Those in certain health fields are eligible for up to $36,700 of unsubsidized loans in a year.

The government pays interest on subsidized loans during a student’s enrollment; the student pays all interest on unsubsidized loans but may defer payment during enrollment.

The 2003 study found that many students — 16 percent of those at private business programs, 39 percent in private law schools, and lower percentages in other fields — also took out private loans likely to have higher interest rates.

Federal loans fall short of the cost of graduate education.

Researchers noted that “the annual federal student loan limits for graduate and professional programs accounted for only a fraction of the total cost of attendance.”

In 2002-03, a full-time student enrolled in a master of arts or science program at a public university paid an average of $17,207 in “total costs”– tuition, fees, books, supplies, transportation and living expenses, according to the study. It found the highest costs, an average of $56,370, for students at private dental schools.

“Free money” from schools, governments and private sources — whether grants, assistantships, scholarships or tuition waivers — represented 40 percent of the aid for master’s students in arts, science and education and as little as 11 percent in dental schools.

It represented 19 percent of aid for business students; 54 percent, theology; 17 percent, law; 11 percent, dental; and 24 percent, medical, according to the study.

Mr. Redd’s study found that full-time students were more likely than part-timers to receive fellowships, grants, assistantships and tuition waivers.

Undergraduate schools centrally process admissions applications and financial aid packages. In graduate school, those decisions often are made by individual departments and programs.

While various publications rank graduate programs, none offers a comprehensive guide to the free money at each school or the percentage who receive it, said Donald E. Heller, associate professor and senior research associate in Penn State University’s Center for the Study of Higher Education.

Dr. Heller and Patricia E. Beeson, the University of Pittsburgh’s vice provost for graduate studies, said prospective students should speak with faculty to make sure they’re a good fit for a program and assess the likelihood of aid.

Dr. Heller said his department generally admits only as many doctoral students as it can sponsor with assistantships or other help, and Mr. Durham said Pitt’s theater department seems more generous to students in doctoral and master of fine arts programs than students in the master of arts program.

Mr. Durham, who had no loans from his undergraduate days at Transylvania University in Lexington, Ky., said he was stunned by the potential borrowing for graduate work at some schools and recalled thinking, “This is a degree in theater, people. It’s not a law degree or medicine.”

An offer of substantial support from one school immediately can curtail a student’s search for a graduate program. That was the case for Mr. Durham and for Chelsea Oakland, an MBA student at Point Park University who receives a tuition waiver and stipend as a graduate assistant.

“How could you turn down a free education?” said Ms. Oakland, who has no loans from her undergraduate and graduate work at Point Park. Mr. Durham and Ms. Oakland enrolled in graduate school to improve their career options. He wants to teach at a university or be part of the artistic leadership at a large theater; she wants to work for a talent or casting agency.

“Our economy and society are very dependent on the training received by doctors, lawyers, engineers, teachers and other professionals,” Mr. Redd’s study said.

“Shortages of trained individuals in these areas could reduce our economic growth and have other severe consequences for our health and welfare. In addition, the financial barriers to graduate and professional education could have an enormous influence on the racial/ethnic composition of professionals in many fields.”

Conventional wisdom holds that a person risks financial hardship if he or she must use more than 10 percent of gross pay to repay student loans.

The financial aid administrators’ 2003 survey said that among those who left school in that year, average repayments ranged from 7.4 percent of starting salary for some master’s recipients to 16.3 percent for some law graduates.

For some, the alternative to borrowing may be to forego a graduate degree. Mr. Durham said he knew one master’s student in the theater department who had multiple jobs but no free money, and dropped out.

“It would have been a non-starter for me without the tuition waiver,” Mr. Durham said.

10.24.06 | Why do you have to fill out the FAFSA to get LOANS?

Posted in Uncategorized by David Bonvie

Morning everyone…I just wanted to write a quick note about a common question I hear a lot on a daily basis…”How is a loan considered Financial Aid?”…Well the way in which the U.S. Government determines it is as follows…Stafford and Perkins loans are low interest loans guaranteed by the Federal government…what does this mean for you? Well, it means that you have rights with these loans that you do not necessarily have with a private/alternative student loan. These rights include deferment if you become unemployed, forbearance if you want to put your payments on hold, and loan forgiveness if you become disabled. These benefits are really good; therefore you must fill out a FAFSA in order to get these loans. The government wants to make sure you NEED this loan before they give it to you. Hope this clears some things up.