How to save on college costs
Seven Tips that could save you $50,000 or
more
Last week we failed to meet Rick Perry’s challenge to design a $10,000 college degree, so this week, my back-up plan is to give some insider secrets on saving costs on college. These are the tips college professors sometimes tell their friends and parents. I’ve given these tips often in the last 16 years of teaching. (Just for the record, the sticker price for an average Bachelor’s degree at a Christian college is about $120,000—about $30,000 a year, though the vast majority of students pay far less than this sticker price.) Here’s what we insiders often tell our friends and parents about saving $50,000 or more on college costs.
1. Get a college job
yourself.
The biggest way to save on college costs is when dad or mom (or husband/wife) gets a job at the college. Most colleges offer steep discounts (some totally free tuition—an $80,000 discount!) to faculty and other employees as part of the salary package. Colleges figure they can get better qualified people and pay them less by offering this benefit. But don’t take it for granted. Check several years before your child is a senior (with the college’s HR office) to see what the policy is. Some colleges limit this benefit to certain positions and others phase it in over several years. However, if you can land a job fulfilling your calling and training, and you’re willing to move, this is the greatest way to save money on your children’s college costs.
2. Teach your student
to get A’s.
The next best way is grades.
The college aid system is rigged. But it isn’t rigged like most people
think (in favor of the poor). It is rigged in favor of the smart. Starting in
elementary school, spend an hour a day helping your kids earn A’s in school. Get
them into the habit of expecting A’s and working for them. Then by high school when
you can’t do as much, they’ll be in the habit. When such a student takes the
3. Bank college credit while still in high school.
Besides high school “advanced placement” courses, most colleges also offer credits-in-escrow programs. This means a student still in high school can take a college course in the summer, or online and the credits for that course are waiting for them when they enter college. Teens might whine about giving up their time for this, but when parents do the raw math they simply insist. A course like this might cost a couple hundred dollars, an 80% or more discount compared to a full blown college course. Sometimes these courses cost nothing at all—saving thousands per course. This tip alone can save your family $5,000-$10,000 or even as much as the cost of an entire semester.
4. CLEP courses.
The College-Level Examination Program offered by the College Board folk is a way to earn college credit by simply taking a test, usually for a “general education” requirement. If your student already knows a subject why should they have to take another course on it? (I could answer that, but this column is about money, not learning.) The CLEP test costs about $100 and a score of usually 51% will earn your student three hours college credit. It might cost another $100 to transfer the credit to the college’s books, but for maybe $200 the student get three hours credit, 80% or more discount on the regular cost. If your student earned an A in high school algebra they probably can get 51% on the college algebra test. I know clever students who CLEPed 30 hours of credit—all their electives and some Gen Ed and saved $30,000 (one full year of college) by simply taking tests. Ironically the smarter students CLEP more (see #1 above) so “the rich get richer” when it comes to smart students. (Average students, lazy students and poor students always pay the most for college.) There is one hitch however. While you can CLEP for electives, only certain CLEP tests count for certain required General Education courses. Get the sheet from your college while your student is still in high school so you know which CLEP test counts for which required college course.
5. Take summer
classes.
Starting the summer after high school
begin taking courses and do it in the college summers too. You can take
summer courses at your own college, at a nearby junior college or online. This
is a giant money-saver but you have to work
to make it happen. If a student pays attention and takes classes in the
summer they can save thousands more. Even online courses from their own college
can be half price in the summers. It is
like clipping coupons—a little work can save a bundle. However, do the work.
Find out from your college’s records office or Registrar what courses would
count as a course required at that college. All courses are not equivalent. Most
any course from an accredited school might count as an elective, but your
college might not accept a community college’s “British history” course to meet
their own requirement for “American history.”
Check first. Of course summer school trades-off the enriching experience
of a summer internship or hitchhiking through
6. Apply for other
scholarships.
The cruise ship ethos at most college campuses works against
doing most of the above. Taking a CLEP test means studying for several hours,
signing up for the test, and setting apart the time to leave the coffee shop to
take the test. Most students say they are just too busy to do this. So they
float down the river of nonchalance and casually sign up for more debt each
year. If you want to do your student a big favor, get more involved in their
decisions on these things and hold them accountable for doing it. For example,
every year the
7. Be nimble for the coming changes
All of the above advice is current—it
can save you $50,000 or more right now on a college degree. But it will get
better in the future—if you keep your eyes open. Education is facing major
changes in the future that will benefit families financially. For instance, the
federal government went to bat last week for parents by forcing all colleges (by
Your excellent feedback last week triggered these thoughts. So, this is what I’m thinking about this week. Got anything to add? Parents of middle schoolers are freaking out about college costs. But it isn’t as bad as they imagine. It just takes some coupon-clipping kind of work to save $50,000 or more on the cost of college.
That’s what I’ll be thinking about this week.
So, what do you think?
The discussion of this column is on
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Keith Drury
www.TuesdayColumn