First YOU MUST COMMITSleekFire wrote:Could someone please explain in layman english what has to be accomplished by Friday...
Thanks!

First YOU MUST COMMITSleekFire wrote:Could someone please explain in layman english what has to be accomplished by Friday...
Thanks!
I'll give it my best shot.SleekFire wrote:Could someone please explain in layman english what has to be accomplished by Friday...
Thanks!
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I thought you apply for the first year and then you can apply for more the next year? I talked to someone at my lender (bofa) and that's what they said.paranoidjet wrote:I'll give it my best shot.SleekFire wrote:Could someone please explain in layman english what has to be accomplished by Friday...
Thanks!
First, you need to do some research and choose a lender for both your Federal Stafford (if you are eligible to receive them) and for your GradPLUS loans. If you need more data about these broken down, people here can help. Personally, I chose Discover as opposed to the Access Group, but that was a personal decision and such a decision may not be right for you.
Then, you'll need to apply for these loans. I have almost no credit whatsoever and was approved by both lenders, so you probably shouldn't have an issue. That being said you will need some info for them in order to do this - I needed my Social Security number, my FAFSA pin, my driver's license number and some references. All in all it wasn't too stressful, although I did need to figure out how much GradPLUS I will need over the next three years which was a bit of work.
Assuming that you're approved (and I haven't heard anyone not being approved yet), you'll be given the option to electronically sign your promissory notes, which I elected to do. This makes everything groovy on the lender's end, but you still need to provide Columbia with your promissory note information. So then you need to download these notes from their website in order to inform Columbia about where you're getting your funding. You should also have a Columbia specific form that came with your award letter, and I think you need to mail both promissory notes and your Columbia-specific form to Columbia's financial aid office, presumably by this Friday.
You might have Perkins loans as well, which require their own promissory note and which another poster has indicated will be mailed to us later on. This I'm still a little lost on.
Does that clear things up for you? Let me or some other posters know if you need more info. We're all in this together.
Applicant7643 wrote:
I thought you apply for the first year and then you can apply for more the next year? I talked to someone at my lender (bofa) and that's what they said.
They also said they forward the information for you.
1.) As I understand it, financial aid disbursements go out right before the beginning of the academic semester. Two disbursements are made - one for each semester. You do have to budget, this means, but it's a skill you pick up pretty quickly. All expenses belonging to the school are taken out before it gets deposited, so that means you don't get 71K in your account and then you cut a check to housing and another to the tuition office - all CULaw expenses get taken out before you get one penny.lex talionis wrote:Does anyone know when loans actually get disbursed? I have a teeny fear that it will be too far in advance of the start of classes and I'll blow my budget shopping in July. (No, I have do not have self-control when there's 22k sitting in my bank account and nothing else to do.) I never took out loans from UG, so I don't have a point of reference.
Also, would it be prudent to try and budget to have (some) money saved for summer, or should I be fully confident in my ability to secure summer funding or find a paying 1L gig? Because assuming I get the housing assignment I requested, my 9 month budget is looking to be around 1300-1400 per month for food, shoes, etc., and I've lived in more expensive cities on less.
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Our housing expenses aren't taken out automatically unless you get a dorm, tough. UAH says we are billed monthly and are on normal NYC leases. And no one has gotten their housing assignments yet, which is why I said "assuming I get the housing assignment I requested."paranoidjet wrote:1.) As I understand it, financial aid disbursements go out right before the beginning of the academic semester. Two disbursements are made - one for each semester. You do have to budget, this means, but it's a skill you pick up pretty quickly. All expenses belonging to the school are taken out before it gets deposited, so that means you don't get 71K in your account and then you cut a check to housing and another to the tuition office - all CULaw expenses get taken out before you get one penny.lex talionis wrote:Does anyone know when loans actually get disbursed? I have a teeny fear that it will be too far in advance of the start of classes and I'll blow my budget shopping in July. (No, I have do not have self-control when there's 22k sitting in my bank account and nothing else to do.) I never took out loans from UG, so I don't have a point of reference.
Also, would it be prudent to try and budget to have (some) money saved for summer, or should I be fully confident in my ability to secure summer funding or find a paying 1L gig? Because assuming I get the housing assignment I requested, my 9 month budget is looking to be around 1300-1400 per month for food, shoes, etc., and I've lived in more expensive cities on less.
2.) How did you already receive your housing information?!!? Has everyone gotten theirs?!? I don't think I've seen anything yet and I applied by the deadline...
I gotcha. Yep, I'm retarded.lex talionis wrote:Our housing expenses aren't taken out automatically unless you get a dorm, tough. UAH says we are billed monthly and are on normal NYC leases. And no one has gotten their housing assignments yet, which is why I said "assuming I get the housing assignment I requested."paranoidjet wrote:1.) As I understand it, financial aid disbursements go out right before the beginning of the academic semester. Two disbursements are made - one for each semester. You do have to budget, this means, but it's a skill you pick up pretty quickly. All expenses belonging to the school are taken out before it gets deposited, so that means you don't get 71K in your account and then you cut a check to housing and another to the tuition office - all CULaw expenses get taken out before you get one penny.lex talionis wrote:Does anyone know when loans actually get disbursed? I have a teeny fear that it will be too far in advance of the start of classes and I'll blow my budget shopping in July. (No, I have do not have self-control when there's 22k sitting in my bank account and nothing else to do.) I never took out loans from UG, so I don't have a point of reference.
Also, would it be prudent to try and budget to have (some) money saved for summer, or should I be fully confident in my ability to secure summer funding or find a paying 1L gig? Because assuming I get the housing assignment I requested, my 9 month budget is looking to be around 1300-1400 per month for food, shoes, etc., and I've lived in more expensive cities on less.
2.) How did you already receive your housing information?!!? Has everyone gotten theirs?!? I don't think I've seen anything yet and I applied by the deadline...
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Could just show up and pay with your card in person? I figure the third party processor is probs an online thing?jpaul09 wrote:Re: credit card payments: Here's what Columbia's Web site says:
Students must then calculate and pay any balance not covered by their actual aid. Student balances may be paid on-line using E-Check which debits a bank account directly, by mail, in person at the University's Cashiering windows in Kent Hall, or by credit card through a third party processor (fees apply).
Depending on the fees, it might not be worth it.
yes, that would definitely make it not worth it!imchuckbass58 wrote:Credit cards charge interchange fees regardless of whether you use them in person or online (1-3% of each purchase deducted from merchant, great racket, eh?)
I imagine Columbia would make you pay these, in which case it's probably not worth it. The federal government does the same thing if you pay your taxes via credit card.
Now there's a charge.
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