Lynn O'Shaughnessy

The College Solution

Top Colleges to Cut Big Aid Packages?

By Lynn O'Shaughnessy | Aug 26, 2009 |

For about two years the nation’s most elite schools have been letting families participate in a fabulous trade-in opportunity. Parents pay a pittance to a school like Princeton, Harvard and Swarthmore and in return their child gets to earn a bachelor’s degree that retails for more than $200,000.

This wildly popular higher-ed deal, however, could be endangered.

Here’s a little background: About three dozen elite schools, including the Ivy League institutions, began rolling out amazing financial aid programs roughly two years ago. One aim of the schools was to neutralize pesky politicians, who were furious that some colleges were now charging $50,000.

Specifically, the Ivies and other elite higher-ed fortresses began offering no-loan student aid packages. If you needed assistance, the schools promised that you wouldn’t have to take out loans. What made these programs extraordinary was that even families with incomes of $150,000 or higher had a chance at nibbling at these financial aid freebies.

So what’s happening now?  The endowments of these elite schools are in the toilet so the institutions have less mad money to throw around. Consequently, they are starting to question whether a family making $175,000 really needs student aid when the schools face so many pressing needs.

An article on Bloomberg.com capture the wavering that’s begun. Swarthmore College’s dean of admission and financial aid said that his school, along with others, is reevaluating its financial aid program and that he can’t make any promises for what will happen next year. Pomona College’s dean of admissions concedes that the school probably wouldn’t have rolled out the no-loan program if it had foreseen Wall Street’s implosions.

With the new admission season just beginning, it won’t be long before we know if there is a limit to the generosity of elite schools.

Swarthmore image by Perdita. CC 2.0.

 
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  •  
    1

    lol.lol.lol

    08/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Is the COLLEGE Cash for Clunkers Program Ending?

    So if I follow your analogy, teenagers are old gas guzzlers
    who you get rid of in exchange for $4500 and a newer, better
    child. Gotcha. Because no-loans made colleges *give* you
    money.

  •  
    2

    crondanet5

    08/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Is the COLLEGE Cash for Clunkers Program Ending?

    Lynn, may I use this posting to say I heard your interview on Adam Bold's radio show? Your book sounds fascinating. Viewers can google or bing Adam Bold and find the show you were on. Very informative.

  •  
    3

    The College Solution

    08/31/09 | Report as spam

    Crondanet5

    Glad you liked my radio interview. The spot must have resonated with the radio audience because over the weekend my book, The College Solution, became a Amazon.com best seller!

    Lynn O'Shaughnessy

  •  
    4

    crondanet5

    09/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Is the COLLEGE Cash for Clunkers Program Ending?

    The crowd that follows Adam are first-rate people. Adam tells it like it is. If a fund is bad he has an alternative for the caller. And he called the bottom of the market back in March for what it was. You came across the same way. Fact after fact. Idea after idea. Not how to sneak past the admissions office, but how to choose a college that's right for your kid and how to get in for less than full price. You were great. Nice to converse with a best selling author. happy

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Lynn O'Shaughnessy

Lynn O'Shaughnessy is a financial journalist and the author of a critically acclaimed book, The College Solution: A Guide for Everyone Looking for the Right School at the Right Price. She has been a contributor to such publications as BusinessWeek, USA Today, Money Magazine, Medical Economics, The New York Times, Consumer Reports MoneyAdvisor, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, AARP: The Magazine and Kiplinger

Lynn O'Shaughnessy

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