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How to Get More Money for College

As a journalist who has covered college admission for many years, I’ve seen ­firsthand how students and families struggle to make sense of the ­financial aid award letters they get from colleges.

At a charter school in New Orleans, for example, I saw a student who didn’t initially understand that even though she was being offered $32,000 in scholarship aid from her dream school – a private liberal arts college – she still would have been in major debt upon graduation since that amount only covered one year of tuition.

In another case, I saw an immigrant father ask why his son couldn’t enroll in his ­ first-choice college – even though the family didn’t have enough to cover all four years – and then just try to hustle up the rest of the money they needed to cover sophomore year. And he would have taken that route had a ­financial aid adviser not discouraged him by warning him that sophomore year comes quicker than you think – and how it would be better to settle on a second-choice school that was offering a better financial aid package.

I can’t help but wonder if these situations – and the many others just like them that play out every year – might have turned out differently if these students and their parents had known something about the art of appeal.

At least that’s what I’ve been thinking since I read a new book from ­financial aid guru Mark Kantrowitz, titled How to Appeal for More College Financial Aid: ­The Secrets to Negotiating a Better Financial Aid Offer … and Getting More Financial Aid in the First Place!

“The more you know, the better position you are in to negotiate,” Kantrowitz writes. “So, do your research in advance.”41 O Qr Vfi Cn L Sx331 Bo1204203200

Indeed, the book is chock-full with both simple and sophisticated insights for anyone interested in learning more about how to squeeze as much money out of a college as possible within the framework of the law. That would include students, parents and ­ financial aid advisers.

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