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Personal finance
Course: Personal finance > Unit 9
Lesson 3: Grants and scholarships- Information about athletic scholarships
- Types of grants and scholarships
- Searching for scholarships
- Student story: Searching for scholarships
- Student story: Applying for scholarships
- Student story: Relying on scholarships when facing immigration challenges
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Types of grants and scholarships
Want to join the conversation?
- can you get a scholarship from band(6 votes)
- Band scholarships are a type of merit-based scholarships that could be offered by a university. The monetary value of these scholarships depends on several factors, but you can increase the chances of receiving this type of scholarship by becoming a music major, auditioning for a school, or participating in music extracurriculars such as marching band.(3 votes)
- Is it possible to get a need and merrit based scholarship?(6 votes)
- It is very possible to get both types of scholarships but it will not be lumped under one scholarship. They will most likely be presented separately by the university you have been accepted to as part of your financial aid package.(3 votes)
- Any places for Canadian students you recommend?(7 votes)
- I am a junior in high school intending to spend 2 years serving a church mission before going to college. When should I start applying for scholarships? If I receive scholarships now, will I lose them by the time I am in college?(4 votes)
- Im want to go to Baylor University(2 votes)
- It seems like you have posted two comments. Well, keep on going. And it is kind of surprising to be when you told that you are in 6th grade. In my country context, it is too early to think in such way.
But still best of luck. :)(4 votes)
- What are good scholarship search engines? I already use FastWeb and Unigo, does anyone have other ideas too?(2 votes)
- If you make a College Board account, it has a very useful feature where you can narrow down college search results based on things like price, majors, activities, and financial aid. I highly recommend it!(3 votes)
- Does the Beta club give scholarships?(2 votes)
- I'm a British student and am in my last year of secondary school but i am taking the SAT in march and wanted to know how to get my results out to colleges and how likely it is to get an academic scholarship. Thanks!(2 votes)
- I didn't fully understand, are merit-based scholarships given based on family income or talent? Like let's say I'd like to someday major in Art and animation, would education and family income come into play or is it fully based on my talent?(1 vote)
- Colleges and universities have some of their own funds available for talent-based scholarships, but if they can find a way in which you are qualified to get need-based scholarships from, say, family, government or foundations, they'll take that money first (to apply to your various fees) and apply the talent-based stuff later. In this way, they are able to spread their own available funds out to help a wider range of applicants.
The college's "talent-based" funds are not there to displace what they can get from your family, from the government, or from a philanthropic foundation.(2 votes)
- It would be great if there was all this kind of information on how to pay for college, but for international students, because the processes change a little bit.(1 vote)
- Yes. The processes for international students are different. I would suggest choosing a school and exploring on its web site and through conversations with international admissions staff just what you might need to do for that school.(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] We're here with Sean Logan, director of college counseling
at Phillips Academy. Sean, one of the biggest
things that students and also parents are really concerned about is how to pay for college. One of the things that excites students and parents the most is free money, so scholarships and grants. Let's dig into that. Where does that money come from and how do students get it? - [Voiceover] Sure, so I think there's a couple different places that students can find that kind of money. One of the first ones
might be merit based aid. Merit based aid is typically given by the college for students who have specific talents in
certain kinds of things. - [Voiceover] So what sort of talents would actually get you that kind of aid? - [Voiceover] So there
are schools that give out merit based money
based on really strong academics, it might be
on a musical ability, or an artistic ability, it could be on leadership or community service, experiences you've had. So there's multiple different ways that schools may give out that money. - [Voiceover] I imagine then
that sports scholarships, which are sort of some
of the most well-known type of scholarships out there, probably fall into this type of merit based scholarship then. - [Voiceover] Correct. - [Voiceover] Are schools the only place that give it or are there
also other organizations where students can apply to get some merit based scholarships? - [Voiceover] So there
are definitely merit scholarships that come
from private companies, and corporations, and
community groups as well. Again, they may be renewable, they may be just for one year only, but again, there are many, many places where students can go and find different opportunities to apply for maybe $500 to $30,000. Fastweb.com is a free
site that's a great place that students can look online for different types of opportunities. They generally tend to have a lot of local opportunities
in their own community that their high schools
probably have as well. - [Voiceover] Great, and in addition to merit based aid,
you mentioned there was sort of another place where a lot of money comes from. Talk me through that. - [Voiceover] The other
kind of aid you will find is mostly need based aid. That's based on a very
different set of criteria. That need based aid comes from your family's income
and family's situation. Based off of that, schools will also offer need based aid for you. So the way that that happens is schools are going to ask you
to fill out some forms. The first one is called
the FAFSA, the F-A-F-S-A, which stands for the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. Remember that free part of that,. There are a couple of
sites out there that will happily do the FAFSA for
you and charge you for it, so be sure you're on the right website, fafsa.ed.gov. That website is what you will use. There's one other form
that a lot of schools use, and that's called the CSS Profile. That's found on the college board website. But those are two forms that look at your family's finances in a little bit different way. Based on those two forms,
a college will determine how much your family should be able to contribute to your education. So say that those two forms determine that your family can pay $10,000 towards a $60,000 education, then the school is going to come up with that extra $50,000
to make it possible for you to come. How they do that, hopefully a good portion of that will be scholarship aid that you will not pay back. - [Voiceover] Great,
and so just to make sure I understand, you're going to fill out the FAFSA and maybe the profile for some schools. They're going to give
some sort of estimation as to what your family can pay, and then the school's
going to cover the rest. - [Voiceover] Right, and remember that all those two forms do is determine estimated family contribution, that's all they do. What the schools do
with them varies greatly depending on their financial aid policy. So again, hopefully if
there's a $50,000 need that is still there,
the hope is that will be a school that will give the great majority of that in scholarship aid which you will not have to repay. - [Voiceover] Gotcha, and so this is where those need based scholarships come from is once you've filled out the FAFSA, and it's coming directly from the school. The school's paying for
it or is that coming from the government as a combination? - [Voiceover] Probably a combination. So there are federal funds that are available to students, especially from lower income backgrounds. - [Voiceover] So that's
where the Pell Grant, the Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant, things like that? - [Voiceover] Correct. Then the schools usually have their own general scholarship fund that they also pull from as well. - [Voiceover] Great, thank you so much.