Learning from your financial aid mistakes, part 1
As we commemorate the second anniversary of the Student LoanDown — how can it be two years already? — I'm reminded of why we started blogging in the first place: To have a conversation about education financing.
Although we bloggers tell you about our experiences, it's really your experiences that resonate loudly and clearly with this community. And recently we were fortunate enough to get some great real-life experience from Jennifer, an American student about to begin graduate work at the the School of Oriental and African Studies
in London.
So for the next couple of days, I thought I'd share Jennifer's advice with all of you. It's a slightly different perspective from ours, which is what blogging's all about.
My parents were fantastic financial planners. They saved enough money to almost entirely pay for my entire undergraduate education, which was fortunate because they also made too much money for me to qualify for federal loans.
I did have to take out a couple of private education loans as an undergraduate for the summer course I took in Geneva and the month I spent doing volunteer work in Brazil. When I began to apply for loans, having already taken Intro to Microeconomics
, I figured that the student loan market was probably homogenous because every bank offers student loans. How different can they be?
Plenty different, let me tell you. Thus, I would like to offer "The Three Mistakes I Made (or Almost Made) Financing My Education."
Mistake #1: Not Reading the Fine Print
Know the details of your loan. Before you sign the loan, read the fine print. I'll bet you're thinking, "Oh brilliant advice, everyone knows that you're supposed to read over the details of a loan before you sign it!" But seriously, how many people actually read the fine print, those tiny little details in seven-point font that appear in a new PDF window and go on for about six pages?
I didn't. Brilliant financial planner that I am, I was usually applying for loans after classes started, in an hour between classes, after I'd received the notice from Student Financial Services telling me that I owed the school money. I chose my lender based upon the lender my roommate at the time was using. I hate filling out loan applications because it feels as though the amount is always large and relatively abstract — while I theoretically know the value of $49,000 (the cost of 1 Masters of Science degree
, also a year's salary, the cost of a luxury car, etc.), the reality of that large an amount of money remains relatively unfathomable. The possibility that I will ever earn a salary high enough to pay it back seems unreal. Even the meager $10,000s I needed sporadically as an undergrad felt relatively daunting and thus, I avoided loan applications until they became absolutely pressing.
The reality of the situation is that taking out loans requires comparative research. The first undergraduate loan I took out required repayment upon completion of my BA, regardless of whether or not I was continuing my education at the graduate level — something that I was in no position to do.
Select your private loan company carefully. Some loans allow repayment to begin before graduation, some charge an "origination fee," others do neither. It is a good idea to check the student loan options at the bank you keep a checking account with, as some banks offer post-graduation interest rate reductions for current customers. Consider opening a checking account with a bank just for the interest rate reduction; a lot of students relocate to a new city and have to open a checking account anyway, so check out which banks operate where you go to school. Many banks offer checking account applications over the internet, so you can apply before you leave home with plenty of time to apply for an education loan.
For a helpful guide to the different types of loans and their terms, check out Mapping Your Future
, and for extra financial planning fun, click on the "play Show Me the Future" link on the left side of the screen.
Next week we'll be back with Parts 2 and 3 of Jennifer's financial aid life lessons. Stay tuned!


