"How To Send Your Child To College For Free" or close to it will guide those people who have a low to moderate income to a practically free college education, even if you have excessive credit card debt and own your own home with half a million dollars equity in it. Discover the secrets to a VIRTUALLY FREE education!!! Know before you apply to any U.S. University if it will offer you a lucrative college financial aid package.
Learn how to have college education loans forgiven years after you’ve applied for them. Dear Parent, I’m sure you’re not very different from me. For most of us, the initial exposure to sending our children to college can be a daunting experience at best. And for those of us who can’t afford to send our child to the university they deserve, there’s also quite a bit of disappointment. I’d like you to look at parts of two chapters in my book about how this book came about. It won’t cost you anything to read. I promise. How This Book Was Born During the latter part of 2000, when the economy started to turn sour, my computer business started to soften. With the tragic events of 9/11, many of the opportunities I had relied on in the Wall Street area disappeared. To make matters worse, this was the same time that my son was about to start applying to college. I started out writing this guide because I was overwhelmed by information about how I could afford to send my son to college. Every college web site provided almost the same financial aid information. They took me to the same sites. They offered me the same advice.When my son went to his high school guidance counselor, he took home over two-dozen magazines and newsletters. Together we spent months on the Internet and one day realized that a government guide, written by the U.S. Department of Education, answered dozens of our questions. We also purchased a popular book that walked us through the process of filling out the popular CSS Profile and FAFSA financial aid forms. Days later we found the same advice on the Internet. But what I discovered was that not everything you need to know to finance your child’s education is out there on the Internet. I spent months speaking to financial aid officers at many universities and discovered that just filling out the CSS Profile and FAFSA financial aid forms and meeting some deadlines is only half the battle in acquiring college Pell grants, college need-based grants, and Federal Stafford and Perkins loans. Knowing the right questions to ask, and knowing who to ask led me to information not available through the high school guidance counselors or the many web sites of the colleges my son applied to. That is how this book was born.This is not a large cumbersome book. This is an interactive guide. A kind of cookbook with parents and students in mind so you don’t have to hire a ’professional’ college financial aid planner and pay an exorbitant fee to tell you where to go to apply for |