Business Services Industry
What is the true cost of your college? Here are 7 ways your school can help families better understand and manage college costs - The Admissions Angle
University Business, Feb, 2004 by Howard Greene, Matthew Greene
In the familiar fable, a nervous Chicken Little becomes convinced that the sky is falling after an acorn falls from a nearby oak tree and hits her on the head. In a state of panic, she, in turn, convinces her friends of the Looming catastrophe, and they join her in her journey to tell the King that the sky is collapsing. While we may chuckle at the naivete of Chicken Little and her entourage, we're also witness to a similar wave of anxiety on the part of college-bound students and their parents, about what they see as the disintegration of their ability to afford college.
Yet, one of the fundamental obstacles to greater college access has less to do with actual college costs, and more to do with a misunderstanding on the part of many families as to what these costs are, how to put them into context, and how to manage them over time. If colleges wish to enroll a socio-economical[y diverse student body, let alone retain middle-income families, they must play an integral, active role in helping families understand the true costs of a college education and how they can afford to pay for it.
BUILDING MISUNDERSTANDING
Most media accounts concerning the costs of college seem to focus on several points that are of little help to families concerned about paying for college, and, by extension, to the colleges eager to enroll them. We all read daily about huge percentage increases in the tuition and fees at private and public institutions, massive cuts in state spending on higher education, and budget standoffs between state legislatures and public universities. The press focuses on congressional proposals to penalize colleges for raising tuition too much, or on states for cutting budgets too deeply. The impression is that families cannot afford college, since the value of federal grants like the Pell Grant have been eroded, and annual tuition and fees at many institutions seem outrageously high--well above the price of most family automobiles.
Is it any wonder that families expect college to cost more than it actually does? That they think institutions are gouging them for no particular reason? That they feel hopeless about their ability to achieve the American dream of a college education and all that such an education could help them to achieve?
THE COLLEGE STEPS IN
Certainly, it is vital for families to understand trends in college costs and legislative options, in part so that they may vote intelligently for leaders who will support programs that will help in the long term. In the short term, however, it is more helpful for families to understand the current context in which they and the colleges are operating, so that they can open more options for their children and not give up on the goal of achieving a college education. Colleges and universities are today, more than any other agent, in a position to help parents and students understand college costs and negotiate the complex world of saving for college and applying for all varieties of financial aid. Colleges should help families focus on financial opportunities and strategies, rather than on the underlying reasons for high costs. To that end, here are seven pointers to help your institution dispel the false impressions (and resultant fears) that lead so many families to believe that, indeed, the sky is falling.
1--Encourage your professional financial aid officers to be far more visible. Your institution's financial aid officers should travel as a team with admissions officers to secondary schools, college fairs, regional gatherings, and on-campus information sessions. Their very presence (not to mention the critical information they can bring to these audiences) will send a positive and reassuring message to potential applicants and parents. At such meetings--and at all opportunities--financial aid officers should encourage families to see them as professional counselors who can help families achieve their goals. Meeting the counselors in open and non-threatening circumstances will, in effect, give families the green tight to call or make an appointment with the counselors, to discuss options for paying the costs associated with your institution.
2--Set up live Internet chats for financial aid officers, students, and their parents, at various set times. As it turns out, the majority of questions related to paying for college fall into "FAQ" (frequently asked question) patterns. The questions you answer for one parent may help 30 others "lurking" in the electronic background. What's more, we've discovered that parents and students who might previously have been unwilling to ask personal financial questions at a group gathering, seem quite willing to share detailed family histories and financial aid profiles via e-mail.
3--Encourage admissions and financial aid officers, together, to seek out opportunities to speak at local and regional gatherings of important information disseminators. These include Rotary, Kiwanis, boards of education, organizations working with disadvantaged children, community colleges and centers. The talks should emphasize the fundamental principles of affording a college education.
Most Recent Reference Articles
- ARAB EUROPEAN RELATIONS - Dec 22 - Russia Denies Selling Missile System To Iran
- EGYPT - Dec 29 - Opposition Says Mubarak Blessed Israeli Attacks
- ARAB AFFAIRS - Dec 22 - Syria Will Eventually Move To Direct Talks With Israel
- ARAB AFFAIRS - Dec 30 - GCC Denounces Massacre
- ARAB ISRAELI RELATIONS - Israel Issues An Appeal To Palestinians In Gaza
Most Recent Reference Publications
Most Popular Reference Articles
- Credit card debt on college campuses: causes, consequences, and solutions
- 9 questions to ask your new lover: what you were afraid to ask, but always wanted to know
- How Tyler Perry rose from homelessness to a $5 million mansion
- Rejoice anyway - Zephaniah 3:14-20, Philippians 4:4-7 - Living by the Word - Column
- Living by the word


