WD-40 wrote:(=DK=)Samonuh wrote:Do you know what I've begun to wonder? Why do parent's bother saving money for their child's education? Do they realize that the saved money will only hurt them by taking away from the financial aid offered to them? My parents didn't save a dime for me to go to college, and my university was very generous with financial aid. However, I have friends whose parents saved a sickening amount of money just for their child's education, which simple screwed them over on the FAFSA. To make a long story short, being financially irresponsible pays off when it comes to receiving grants and scholarships from private universities.
Not true actually. I have 3 girls in college, a huge mortgage and many other expenses. To invest and save for your kids early on is a must, because I make
good money, and
that alone screws my kids out of a lot of scholarships. Academics alone is what they can hope for on any scholarship, and that hasnt helped even though they get 3.4 thru 4.0.
I agree with WD-40. You do need to save, although I think it depends on the particular college you are planning to go to.
State schools, I would assume, don't give subjective scholarship money: you either qualify based on grades, test scores, geographic location, and so on. Private colleges obviously award scholarship money for subjective reasons and arbitrary qualities that they look for.
. I believe that the Ivy Leagues are generous in their awarding of money, and are committed to enabling everyone who gets in to attend.
Other universities are known to be money-hungry, like NYU (not that there is anything wrong with NYU, simply that they are money-grubbers). They seem to be interested in opening foreign campuses and extracting money out of oil-rich Arabs and the burgeoning Chinese industrialist class.
In conclusion, WD-40 is correct: it is risky to not save money for college and rely on a university's generosity. I think you are better off saving whatever you can, and if that isn't enough, go to a university that will be generous. If you live in a state with a good state school, like California (UC Berkley), then you are lucky. If not, and you have a very smart kid, try to encourage him to do well and get into one of the big ones.
Regards
"Mathematics is the queen of sciences and number theory is the queen of mathematics. She often condescends to render service to astronomy and other natural sciences, but in all relations she is entitled to the first rank."~Karl Friedrich Gauss