Your child is starting college…and you’re starting to worry.

You and your child have invested time, money and energy in finding the right college fit. Now you want to make sure your child maximizes the investment you’ve made and positions himself for success after graduation.

  • What courses should he take?
  • Which extracurriculars should she pursue?
  • How can he manage his time successfully?
  • Should she study abroad for a semester or two?
  • Should he get a job on or off campus?
  • How should she handle roommate problems?
  • How will he manage the stress?
  • Should she pursue an internship?
  • Will he get overly distracted by the social scene?
  • Will drug and/or alcohol use compromise her safety?

Students are confronted with these and many other questions throughout their college lives. You can help ensure your child makes the best decisions and achieves his personal goals in college.

College Solutions is proud to introduce an extension of our successful college search service that remains focused on your children, your time and your money.

Our Maximize College Coach service continues the support and guidance your student received throughout the college search and application process. By offering one-on-one coaching throughout your child’s college life, we help your child maximize her college years and graduate on time feeling well prepared for the next step in her life.

As parents, you rest assured knowing your child has an objective strategic partner to help him navigate his college years successfully, leverage your investment and graduate on schedule!

So many choices, so far from home.

Once a year during your child’s college career – most likely around Thanksgiving – he’ll sit down with his Maximize College Coach for a one-on-one planning session. As an added support for your child, she’ll have access to her coach via phone or email while she is at school, for a total of about 3-4 hours of support per year.

The Maximize College Coach’s sole agenda is to help the student make the decisions necessary to achieve his goals. If he wants to make the varsity soccer squad, make the Dean’s list or make a lot of money after college, the Maximize College Coach will help create a plan for success.   

Some issues the Maximize College Coach can help with include:

  • Time management
  • Self-advocacy
  • Course selection
  • Semester abroad
  • Internships and Jobs
  • Extracurricular activities
  • Maximizing college resources & services (career, mental health, drug/alcohol, peer support)
  • Budgeting & credit cards
  • Resume creation
  • Choosing a major
  • Looking for the first post-college job
  • Testing for graduate school

Your child is the Coach’s client, so he can be sure that all conversations and emails remain confidential. This allows your child to freely discuss issues or decisions that she may feel uncomfortable discussing with a parent.

Your Student + Our Maximize College Coach = Success

With the guidance, support and expertise of a dedicated Maximize College Coach, your child will achieve more in college and beyond than he would have alone – and he’ll enjoy his college years more as well!

Today’s most successful executives and professionals have personal coaches they turn to when they need objective opinions and unconditional support in their stressful, busy lives. By giving your child access to this type of resource during her college life, you’re setting her up to achieve more and enjoy more than she ever thought possible.

Your college investment will go further than you thought possible when you hire a Maximize College Coach for your child. If you want your child to maximize his potential, enjoy all that college has to offer, graduate on time and choose a fulfilling first career, consider a Maximize College Coach.

She’ll make some of the most important decisions of her life during college. A supportive, impartial expert to turn to may be the best gift you’ve ever given her.

Call 508-879-7374 today for a free consultation with one of our Maximize College Coaches!

The Dollar Chase

playing the college financial aid game

Playing the college financial aid game

Maine Times January 16, 1997

 

Jim J., a public school teacher, works two full-time jobs and his wife Karen works as well. Everything Karen makes goes toward paying for college. Daughter Mary attends Catawba College in North Carolina at a cost of $14,000 a year. Their son Aaron attends Hampshire College in Massachusetts at a cost of $28,000 a year. Aaron receives grants and loans, which cut the cost of Hampshire roughly in half, but Jim and Karen J. still find themselves faced with a $10,000-a-year bill for each of their collegians. “We manage to squeeze about half of that out,” said Jim, “and the other half we take out in loans.”

After 2 years at Hampshire, Aaron already has loans totaling $15,000. Mary owes $15,000 in her fifth year at Catawba. Jim J. is absolutely convinced that if he and Karen had somehow managed to save enough money to send their children to college, Aaron would not have gotten the amount of financial aid he has received from Hampshire.

Financial aid officials, however, call this idea the “savings myth,” and say that Jim J. could have reduced his overall costs had he saved more beforehand.

“If you've saved over the years, you may pay more out of pocket up front, but you're not paying as much in terms of loans in the long term,” said FAME's Hagerman, “because savings earn interest while loans accrue interest.”

“The myth about parental savings,” said Colby College financial aid director Lucia Whittelsey, “is that if you save, you're going to lose aid. But the need analysis taps assets [such as savings] very lightly—only 2 to 5 percent.”

The intricacies of the college financial aid formula fill a 1,500-page book, but there are two magic numbers that prospective college parents should bear in mind. After allowing for retirement, colleges expect families to contribute no more than 5.64 percent of their total assets per year to education. However, they expect families to contribute up to 47 percent of their adjusted annual income a year to education—in other words, assets are weighted only one-eighth as much as income when it comes to calculating the expected family contribution. So $10,000 in income, therefore, has about the same impact on the financial aid formula as $80,000 in savings.

As it happens, $80,000 is exactly the amount George G., a successful health care professional, had set aside to put his three youngest children through college. That $80,000 is almost four times what the average American family manages to save for college, but with three children going to college next year, $80,000 could easily disappear in 1 year.

George G. put his son Mark through Cornell several years ago. His son Jason is currently at Skidmore, and daughters Molly and Jennifer will be graduating from high school in June. Because he makes a very good living, George G. has never received any financial aid for his children's education. That may change next year.

He will be getting money for college “next year” vows Jeffrey Morrison, the college consultant George has hired to help his family negotiate the college admissions and aid process.

Morrison, who runs College Solutions in Portland, charges a flat fee to assist families in selecting a school and procuring financial aid. He said that College Solutions is now working with 300 families (including those of seven school principals) with an average income of $70,000. The average financial award his clients receive is $18,000, $14,000 of which is in grants—money that does not have to be repaid.

In the college counseling business for 19 years, 7 in Maine, Morrison has amassed a thick file of his former clients' financial aid award letters. He knows where the money is and which colleges offer the most aid, and he uses his knowledge of colleges' past awards to help his clients get the best possible deal.

“They can say whatever they want to Money magazine or Barron's” said Morrison, citing two popular sources of college financial aid information, “but they can't say it to me.”

Morrison also knows who colleges are looking for. Taking three financial aid letters from the file, for example, he points out that two female clients were offered substantially less aid money last year by Wheaton College in Massachusetts than a male client was. Wheaton would never say so, he said, but it has more women than men and is, therefore, willing to pay more to attract male students.

George G.'s son Jason was already thinking about transferring out of Skidmore for his own reasons, but, given that colleges seek to achieve geographic distribution among students, Morrison has suggested that Jason consider colleges on the West Coast that are more apt to provide financial aid for a Maine student—even a Maine student from an affluent family.

College Solutions

Your child is starting college…and you’re starting to worry.

 

You and your child have invested time, money and energy in finding the right college fit. Now you want to make sure your child maximizes the college investment you’ve made and positions him for success after graduation.

 

  • What courses should he take?
  • Which extracurriculars should she pursue?
  • How can he manage his time successfully?
  • Should she study abroad for a semester or two?
  • Should he get a job on or off campus?
  • How should she handle roommate problems?
  • How will he manage the stress?
  • Should she pursue an internship?
  • Will he get overly distracted by the social scene?
  • Will drug and/or alcohol use compromise her safety?

 

Students are confronted with these and many other questions during their college lives. You can help ensure your child makes the best decisions and achieves his personal goals in college.

 

College Solutions is proud to introduce an extension of our successful college search service that remains focused on your children, your time and your money.

 

Our Maximize College Coach service continues the support and guidance your student received throughout the college search and application process. By offering one-on-one coaching throughout your child’s college life, we help your child maximize her college years and graduate on time feeling well prepared for the next step in her life.

 

As parents, you rest assured knowing your child has an objective strategic partner to help him navigate his college years successfully, leverage your investment and graduate on schedule!

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