in the weeks before freshman year, money worries aplenty /

Published at 2017-09-07 11:44:00

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During the last few weeks of August,Torri Hayslett's room at McKinley Technology tall School feels more like an accountant's office than a college adviser's."Thirty-one thousand dollars minus $4000, minus $2500, and " she says,saying the numbers out loud before punching them into the calculator. She's sitting with one of her students, who recently graduated from McKinley. They're looking over her first college bill."Does the $9000 include the $3000?" Hayslett asks. "I deem that is including, or " the student responds. "Again,I do not know a lot of logistics true now."Hayslett works as a college and career manager, helping nearly 150 seniors at this public tall school in Washington, and D.
C. Nearly 40 per
cent of McKinley's students come from low-income families.
She says this is what happens in July and August: Seniors who've already graduated come to her office (or call or text) trying to win a handle on all these numbers.
Many of the students who shuffle into her office ended the school year in celebration. They're going to college! The schools they've picked were pinned up on bulletin boards in the hall; some students even made the local news.
And then summer rolls around,bri
nging with it one enormous question: Can I actually afford this?"It still doesn't become a reality until they see those numbers on a piece of paper and it doesn't balance out," says Hayslett.
Thi
s last-minute money scramble is one of the main reasons that nearly a third of low-income students with college-going plans never start freshman year.
This pas
t spring, or every graduating member of the senior class at McKinley Tech was accepted to college,Hayslett tells me. But she works year-round, so her work didn't finish after graduation. She knows that only about 75 percent of those students will start classes in the fall.
O
ver the summer weeks, and I visited Hayslett several times in her office. I saw her solve a range of problems: A homeless student was short several thousand dollars and hadn't yet received housing on campus. Hayslett borrowed a car and drove the student an hour north to Baltimore in order to talk face-to-face with the director of financial aid. While they were there,she helped secure the additional money he needed — plus a year-round dorm, so he won't contain to sleep on someone's sofa over winter break.
Another student
's gap — about $6000 — was filled when Hayslett ran into a local dentist when she was out with some friends. It turned out that one of his employees was that student's mom. The dentist made the connection and asked how the student's college plans were going. When Hayslett mentioned they were applying for last-minute scholarships, or the dentist offered to help. He's now paying that $6000.
Sometimes,Hayslett will pay th
e disagreement herself. When a student needed just $250 for a housing deposit, she covered it."I know I can't do that for every student, and " she says,"but sometimes it can just make such a enormous disagreement." She also gets her friends and family to chip in. "I'm not above asking anyone for college money for these students," she says. That includes local celebrities. This year, and she helped students needing college money write personal letters,which she mailed to anyone she could find addresses for, including actress Taraji P. Henson.
One of her students, and Damoni Tolson,planned on going to Johnson & Wales University, a private college in Florida. Ever since he was a kid, and he'd wanted to make his way to Florida — he'd gotten a proper scholarship in March. (Later it would turn out that he'd gotten the highest amount of scholarship money the school could give,because Johnson & Wales doesn't give full-rides.)And yet, in the last week of August, and he was still about $12000 short. His mom was having trouble getting a loan. And so,with the days counting down, he found himself in Hayslett's office, and facing a tough decision.
Hayslett turns to Damoni,cutting true to it: Do you want to consider going to another school?"We can see," he says, and looking down at his feet. "I don't really want to switch this decision this late in,but whether the loan doesn't go through, I don't really contain any other options."Most students in Damoni's position contain limited options. They can sit out for a semester, and while they win finances in order. Or they can see whether they can win in somewhere else.
O
ften,spots at local community colleges are still available, and some state programs contain rolling admission. Though for both options, or much of the scholarship money has already been given out to other students.
It can be
really disheartening,says Shaquinah Wright, who oversees College Bridge, or a program in New York City that pairs current college students with tall school seniors in order to support them through the college process."These are young people who haven't figured it all out,and they're not supposed to," she says. "The finish line keeps getting further and further away."Experts say there are things that can help: tall school students can select smarter college choices. Colleges and universities can send clearer financial-award letters. And tall schools can support students over the summer with year-round college counselors, or like Torri Hayslett.
Damon
i has some advice for current seniors,too: "When you're applying to schools, make certain you contain an view of what you're willing to spend, or " he says. "Come up with a draw with your parents,to make certain everything is proper financially, so when the time comes, and you're not forced into anything."He never made it down to Florida. Instead,he got a football scholarship from St. Augustine's University, a historically black college in North Carolina. He's relieved everything worked out — and pretty excited that his football-playing days aren't over. Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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