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In 365 days…. 
You will be sending your 
son or daughter off to college!
College is preparing your child for 
adulthood and their future career. 
 If you think your child is not ready for adulthood, you 
are correct! 
 College gives your child the opportunity to grow, 
develop, individuate and become the adult they will be 
for the rest of their life. 
 Going “away” to school is an important element in 
growing up and learning how to be an adult, while still 
under the safety-net of an academic environment.
Adulthood is full of responsibility and obligation. 
 College is the last chance for your child to focus on 
their own growth and development before they begin 
their own families and careers. 
 This opportunity will only come once! Once it is gone, 
it is gone. 
 Going to college later in life is much more difficult 
because you have to juggle work, family and schooling.
Imagine what you would give to have four years of self exploration.
The best way you can support your 
child in earning their degree is… 
 NOT money 
 BUT by fostering a “college culture” at home.
What’s a college culture? 
 Talk about college at home. 
 Ask your child what colleges they are considering. 
 Let your child know how important it is for them to 
graduate from a four-year college, not just attend 
college. 
 Let them know that graduating from a four-year 
college is not an option but an expectation. 
 Research colleges together. 
 Be honest if you don’t know about something and find 
out together.
Why a 4yr college? 
 Individuals with a bachelors degree earn an average of 
$15,000 A YEAR MORE than those with an associates 
degree and $22,000 A YEAR MORE than those with 
only a high school diploma. 
 Over a lifetime, that’s between $1,000,000.00 and 
$3,000,000.00 MORE with a college degree than 
without one!!!! 
 Over half a MILLION $$$ more with a bachelors 
degree than with an associates degree.
College Admissions Timeline 
 Before summer: 2010 taxes and W2s (submit to office) 
 Over the summer: 
 Research colleges with your child 
 College admissions essay 
 August-December: College Applications (10 total) 
 October: College admissions essay due 
 January 1st: FAFSA Completion 
 Feb 1st: 2011 Taxes and W2s Due 
 March/April: Verification Month 
 May 1st: College decision 
 intent to enroll, 
 tuition deposit, 
 housing deposit) 
 May 15th: 
 Accept financial aid, 
 submit forms to college, 
 register for orientation 
 Mid May: 
 College Signing Day
What can I do as a parent? 
 Use your child’s college match category as a starting point. 
 Research school with your child. Do not consider price or 
location yet! Let your child dream and dream with them! 
 Research the graduation rates for each school. 
 Consider what will give your child the greatest chance at 
earning a bachelors degree and encourage them to pursue 
that option, even if it a challenge. 
 Set your expectations high and make sure your child knows 
them. Your child will be an adult soon, but you will always be 
their parent and they look to you for guidance (even if they 
pretend they don’t).
Researching Colleges 
 Don’t limit your selection because of location or cost! 
 DO create a diverse list of schools. 
 DO consider graduation rate! 
 START where you want to graduate from! Life throws all 
kinds of challenges at us and planning on transferring is a 
huge gamble with your son/daughter’s education and career. 
 Dream big! This is the beginning of your child’s life as an 
adult. If you want them to be successful start them off 
somewhere that IS successful! 
 Don’t say “it’s your choice” when you really mean “I don’t 
know”. Learn with your child, so you can help guide their 
decision in a helpful way.
What matters? 
 Reputation: The school your child will graduate from 
will be on their resume’ for the rest of their life. This 
will distinguish them from their competition and 
either help them or hold them back. 
 Cost: There is a point where a school is no longer 
worth what it costs. 
 Graduation rate: How much is it worth to go to a 
school with a better chance of success?
Graduation rates matter!!!! 
 Chicago community colleges have some of the lowest 
graduation rates in all of the nation. 
 The AVERAGE graduation rate for a community college in 
Chicago is 10%!!!! That means 90% of the students who 
attend there will not earn their degree!
The danger of for-profit schools 
 For profit schools are usually significantly more 
expensive than other private or public colleges. 
 Students of for profit colleges are 5 times more likely 
not to be able to repay their student loan. 
 Why? 
 Higher student loans that mean higher payments. 
 Not as competitive in finding a job as students who 
attended a not-for-profit public or private school.
Examples of for-profit schools 
 American Academy of Art 
 DeVry University 
 University of Phoenix 
 Kaplan University 
 Westwood College 
 The Art Institutes 
 ITT Technical Institute 
 Trade schools
But how can we afford this? 
 It is important to know that college is an investment in 
your child’s future, but it is not only for the rich. 
 Even if you can’t help financially, your child CAN go to 
a 4yr college, and you can help support them in other 
important ways. 
 Even if your child receives NO federal aid, because 
they are undocumented, there are affordable choices 
in Chicago.
Paying for college 
 Grants: Free money 
Most students will receive between $5,000 and $12,000 a year in 
federal/state grants. These grants are called Pel, Map and 
FSEOG. These are based on your financial need. 
Scholarships: 
Most schools (private and public) offer some type of free money 
based on financial need and merit. 
Student Loans: 
Student loans are an investment in your child’s career, but they are 
only worth it IF YOUR CHILD GRADUATES! This is why parent 
support is so important.
The advertised tuition is NOT what you pay. 
 The federal government and schools offer scholarships 
and grants that can significantly reduce the amount 
your child would pay. 
 Student loans will also cover some of this cost. 
 The amount that is left over after all scholarships, 
grants and loans is called “out of pocket”.
SIU Edwardsville 
Actual student ACT 18, GPA 2.81 
 Cost of attendance: $17,500 
 Free money (grants/scholarships): $10,940 
 Work Study: $3,000 
 Loans: $5,500 
 Out of pocket: NONE! Everything is covered. 
 Plan: Use work study money for personal expenses and 
text books.
Lake Forest 
Actual student ACT 21, GPA 3.86 
 Cost of attendance: $ 50, 652 
 Free money (grants/scholarships): $ 37,270 
 Work Study: $ 2,500 
 Loans: $ 5,500 
 Out of pocket: $5,382! Over 90% of the costs covered! 
 Plan: Save $2,500 between now and September. Student or 
parent contributes $300/mo during the school year. 
This one is a bit tougher without parent help, but if you could 
split the monthly cost and each contribute $150, this becomes 
much more doable.
Concerns for undocumented 
students/parents. 
 If your child IS documented but you are not, your child 
IS eligible for financial aid including grants, 
scholarships and loans. They WILL complete a FAFSA 
with their social security number, but will enter 
000,00,0000 for YOUR social security number. 
 FAFSA is only concerned with your child’s 
immigration status NOT yours.
If your child is not documented 
 Your child SHOULD NOT submit a FAFSA! This is 
VERY important 
 Encourage your child to focus on school! 
Undocumented students ARE eligible for merit 
grants/scholarships from colleges, but they are 
dependent on ACT/GPA!
 Your child is eligible for thousands of private 
scholarships that can be researched through various 
sources such as http://latinocollegedollars.org and 
www.thesalliemaefund.org . 
 Begin a college savings plan immediately. Encourage 
your son/daughter to work over the summer and save 
as much money as possible. 
 Seek out resources such as the match-savings program 
offered by the Heartland Alliance.
Sample FAFSA 
 All students (documented or not) will fill out a sample 
FAFSA in class. 
 There will be MANY questions about the FAFSA. We 
will address these in the fall at a FAFSA workshop.
Please feel free to contact 
Ms. Clark and Ms. Martinez 
if you have any questions about the college 
application process. 
We are here to help! 
Thank you!

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Junior Parent College Power Point

  • 1.
  • 2. In 365 days…. You will be sending your son or daughter off to college!
  • 3. College is preparing your child for adulthood and their future career.  If you think your child is not ready for adulthood, you are correct!  College gives your child the opportunity to grow, develop, individuate and become the adult they will be for the rest of their life.  Going “away” to school is an important element in growing up and learning how to be an adult, while still under the safety-net of an academic environment.
  • 4. Adulthood is full of responsibility and obligation.  College is the last chance for your child to focus on their own growth and development before they begin their own families and careers.  This opportunity will only come once! Once it is gone, it is gone.  Going to college later in life is much more difficult because you have to juggle work, family and schooling.
  • 5. Imagine what you would give to have four years of self exploration.
  • 6. The best way you can support your child in earning their degree is…  NOT money  BUT by fostering a “college culture” at home.
  • 7. What’s a college culture?  Talk about college at home.  Ask your child what colleges they are considering.  Let your child know how important it is for them to graduate from a four-year college, not just attend college.  Let them know that graduating from a four-year college is not an option but an expectation.  Research colleges together.  Be honest if you don’t know about something and find out together.
  • 8. Why a 4yr college?  Individuals with a bachelors degree earn an average of $15,000 A YEAR MORE than those with an associates degree and $22,000 A YEAR MORE than those with only a high school diploma.  Over a lifetime, that’s between $1,000,000.00 and $3,000,000.00 MORE with a college degree than without one!!!!  Over half a MILLION $$$ more with a bachelors degree than with an associates degree.
  • 9. College Admissions Timeline  Before summer: 2010 taxes and W2s (submit to office)  Over the summer:  Research colleges with your child  College admissions essay  August-December: College Applications (10 total)  October: College admissions essay due  January 1st: FAFSA Completion  Feb 1st: 2011 Taxes and W2s Due  March/April: Verification Month  May 1st: College decision  intent to enroll,  tuition deposit,  housing deposit)  May 15th:  Accept financial aid,  submit forms to college,  register for orientation  Mid May:  College Signing Day
  • 10. What can I do as a parent?  Use your child’s college match category as a starting point.  Research school with your child. Do not consider price or location yet! Let your child dream and dream with them!  Research the graduation rates for each school.  Consider what will give your child the greatest chance at earning a bachelors degree and encourage them to pursue that option, even if it a challenge.  Set your expectations high and make sure your child knows them. Your child will be an adult soon, but you will always be their parent and they look to you for guidance (even if they pretend they don’t).
  • 11. Researching Colleges  Don’t limit your selection because of location or cost!  DO create a diverse list of schools.  DO consider graduation rate!  START where you want to graduate from! Life throws all kinds of challenges at us and planning on transferring is a huge gamble with your son/daughter’s education and career.  Dream big! This is the beginning of your child’s life as an adult. If you want them to be successful start them off somewhere that IS successful!  Don’t say “it’s your choice” when you really mean “I don’t know”. Learn with your child, so you can help guide their decision in a helpful way.
  • 12. What matters?  Reputation: The school your child will graduate from will be on their resume’ for the rest of their life. This will distinguish them from their competition and either help them or hold them back.  Cost: There is a point where a school is no longer worth what it costs.  Graduation rate: How much is it worth to go to a school with a better chance of success?
  • 13. Graduation rates matter!!!!  Chicago community colleges have some of the lowest graduation rates in all of the nation.  The AVERAGE graduation rate for a community college in Chicago is 10%!!!! That means 90% of the students who attend there will not earn their degree!
  • 14. The danger of for-profit schools  For profit schools are usually significantly more expensive than other private or public colleges.  Students of for profit colleges are 5 times more likely not to be able to repay their student loan.  Why?  Higher student loans that mean higher payments.  Not as competitive in finding a job as students who attended a not-for-profit public or private school.
  • 15. Examples of for-profit schools  American Academy of Art  DeVry University  University of Phoenix  Kaplan University  Westwood College  The Art Institutes  ITT Technical Institute  Trade schools
  • 16. But how can we afford this?  It is important to know that college is an investment in your child’s future, but it is not only for the rich.  Even if you can’t help financially, your child CAN go to a 4yr college, and you can help support them in other important ways.  Even if your child receives NO federal aid, because they are undocumented, there are affordable choices in Chicago.
  • 17. Paying for college  Grants: Free money Most students will receive between $5,000 and $12,000 a year in federal/state grants. These grants are called Pel, Map and FSEOG. These are based on your financial need. Scholarships: Most schools (private and public) offer some type of free money based on financial need and merit. Student Loans: Student loans are an investment in your child’s career, but they are only worth it IF YOUR CHILD GRADUATES! This is why parent support is so important.
  • 18. The advertised tuition is NOT what you pay.  The federal government and schools offer scholarships and grants that can significantly reduce the amount your child would pay.  Student loans will also cover some of this cost.  The amount that is left over after all scholarships, grants and loans is called “out of pocket”.
  • 19. SIU Edwardsville Actual student ACT 18, GPA 2.81  Cost of attendance: $17,500  Free money (grants/scholarships): $10,940  Work Study: $3,000  Loans: $5,500  Out of pocket: NONE! Everything is covered.  Plan: Use work study money for personal expenses and text books.
  • 20. Lake Forest Actual student ACT 21, GPA 3.86  Cost of attendance: $ 50, 652  Free money (grants/scholarships): $ 37,270  Work Study: $ 2,500  Loans: $ 5,500  Out of pocket: $5,382! Over 90% of the costs covered!  Plan: Save $2,500 between now and September. Student or parent contributes $300/mo during the school year. This one is a bit tougher without parent help, but if you could split the monthly cost and each contribute $150, this becomes much more doable.
  • 21. Concerns for undocumented students/parents.  If your child IS documented but you are not, your child IS eligible for financial aid including grants, scholarships and loans. They WILL complete a FAFSA with their social security number, but will enter 000,00,0000 for YOUR social security number.  FAFSA is only concerned with your child’s immigration status NOT yours.
  • 22. If your child is not documented  Your child SHOULD NOT submit a FAFSA! This is VERY important  Encourage your child to focus on school! Undocumented students ARE eligible for merit grants/scholarships from colleges, but they are dependent on ACT/GPA!
  • 23.  Your child is eligible for thousands of private scholarships that can be researched through various sources such as http://latinocollegedollars.org and www.thesalliemaefund.org .  Begin a college savings plan immediately. Encourage your son/daughter to work over the summer and save as much money as possible.  Seek out resources such as the match-savings program offered by the Heartland Alliance.
  • 24. Sample FAFSA  All students (documented or not) will fill out a sample FAFSA in class.  There will be MANY questions about the FAFSA. We will address these in the fall at a FAFSA workshop.
  • 25. Please feel free to contact Ms. Clark and Ms. Martinez if you have any questions about the college application process. We are here to help! Thank you!