NEW YORK
- Kathy Zrinyi figures it's destiny for her son Keith to attend
Ohio
State. A Buckeyes fan since he was a baby, he recently won admission to
the
university that's just a few hours' drive from their home in
Steubenville.
Now there's just one more hurdle - something many families see
looming as they approach the May 1 deadline for accepting college
offers:
the money.
Keith's dream school costs about $18,000 a year, and the
financial
aid letter to Ms. Zrinyi offered to take care of 44 percent. But with
an
income of only $13,000, she didn't see how she could swing the rest. It
wasn't until she talked to a financial-aid counselor that she realized
she
could appeal the decision. "I would have just settled for the award
letter
they sent me and gone out and gotten a loan for the rest of the money,"
she
explains over the phone.
The counselor from the Financial Aid Supersite (www.financialaidsuper site.com) elicited a key
piece of
information that hadn't been conveyed to the school: In June, Keith
will
turn 18, and Zrinyi's ex-husband will no longer pay child support.
After a
quick calculation, the counselor told Zrinyi she should expect about 73
percent of the bill to be covered by financial aid.
As they face steeper tuitions, more parents are deciding that
investing in college is as worthy of professional help as buying a
house or
creating a stock portfolio. Some counselors now specialize in appealing
colleges' financial-aid awards, and they can advise about the many
legitimate reasons a school should consider, such as a change in family
structure or employment, high medical bills, or a student's recent
improvement in grades or test scores.
But experts warn against trying to "game the system." Too many
parents jump quickly into negotiation mode, trying to play one school's
offer against another's, says Stephen Pemberton, founder of Road to
College
(www.roadtocollege.com), a national counseling
service
in Maynard, Mass. "If they sense you are just trying to get a better
deal
and you are treating it like a car, even if there's flexibility on
their end
they're not likely to show it."
Being too pushy is not always the problem, says Stuart Siegel,
founder of College Tuition Solutions (www.collegetuitionsolutions.com) in Erie, Pa.
Many
parents give up too easily on getting a better package. "They shouldn't
be
embarrassed to ask for more," he says.
The difficult part is getting the attention of officials who
control the college purse strings. "Most of those letters end up in the
trash," says Mr. Siegel, who helps families craft more-effective
letters by
"speaking the language" of financial aid administrators. "They have to
be
very concise and state exactly what the problem is.... It's not that
colleges don't care ... but [with] all the people who want more money
from
them, it kind of becomes a white noise.... Sometimes it can take two or
three letters. Persistence has a lot to do with it."
Lily Siegel (no relation) turned to College Tuition Solutions
when
her daughter, Carolyn, was halfway through her studies at Northwestern
University. Her ex-husband was no longer able to cover tuition, and she
was
stunned when the financial-aid office turned down her request for more
funds. With help from Mr. Siegel, she sent letters for nearly a year,
taking
out loans in the meantime. "We finally got the attention of the
director [of
financial aid] ... and they released a grant for her so she could
finish
school," she says from her home in Connecticut. The amount of extra
aid:
$9,000.
Mr. Siegel chooses his clients carefully because he guarantees
to
return the $499 fee unless they win at least $4,000 in additional aid
from
the college. He recently rejected a student who had been offered only a
loan
at his top-choice school. Four other private schools had offered to
cover
nearly half the costs. After some digging, Siegel found out that a
college
counselor had called in a favor to help the student get admitted to the
top-choice school. Siegel didn't consider that a compelling case for
asking
for more aid. "I have to know that there's a real need," he
says.
Comparing aid packages from similar schools often seems crass,
but
sometimes it's appropriate, counselors say. The best approach is to
question
the decision, not make demands: Is there a reason your offer is so much
lower than X's? Is there anything more you can do? "Schools sometimes
do
want to pull students away from their competitors," Mr. Pemberton
says.
As with any consumer purchase, parents should check out a
service's
credentials before signing up. Some play off families' fears that they
can't
understand the process and they might ruin their child's chances of
going to
college, says Dallas Martin, president of the National Association of
Student Financial Aid Administrators in Washington. "I'm not saying
there
aren't people out there who are legitimate private counselors ... but
we try
to direct families to where they can get help without spending
unnecessary
dollars."
For starters, he recommends Department of Education websites
such
as www.FAFSA.ed.gov
and www.student
aid.ed.gov, or its toll-free financial-aid information line,
800-433-3243.
Zrinyi is waiting to see if the appeal comes through for her
son.
And the service is at their disposal until Keith has finished his
studies -
and seen four years' worth of Buckeye games up close.
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