The financial aid administrator is the director of financial aid at the
school(s) that accepted you.
Sometime after you have been accepted the financial aid office would be
notifying you of what aid is being offered. If you want to know what aid
beyone the Stafford loan might be possible, you should call the college
aid office(s).
Steven B. Blank
College Financial Aid Consultants
29 Ives Hill Court
Che****re, CT 06410
(203)250-7761
On 4/20/2007 10:42 AM, MauiJNP wrote:
> "Steve Blank" <steve@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
> news:awVVh.4959$2v1.315@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>>One does not get rejected for aid just because they already have a
>>bachelor's degree.
>>
>>You probably are referring to a comment on your Student Aid Re****t that
>>you are not eligible for a Pell Grant. Pell grants are only for
undergrads
>>seeking their first degree. The next sentence on the SAR probably says
>>something like "However, you may be eligible for other types of aid."
>>
>>Some aid available to undergraduates is not available for graduate
>>students, and vice-versa.
>>
>>As a graduate student you are automatically eligible for up to $20,500
in
>>Stafford Loans. If your school also provides aid from it's own
controlled
>>funds(some graduate schools do not) you are eligible for whatever that
>>might be. Your school decides what other aid, and how much, it might
>>offer - just as your undergrad school did.
>>
>>Almost every new graduate student has a very low EFC because their
parents
>>finances are not considered.
>>
>>
>
>
>
> Yes, this is my comment on the SAR....
>
> "You are not eligible to receive a Federal Pell Grant because you
re****ted
> that you have a bachelor's degree (Item 28) or you are working on a
degree
> beyond a bachelor's degree (Item 49). Your Financial Aid Administrator
will
> determine what types of federal student aid you are eligible to
receive."
>
>
> So who is the financial aid administrator and how do I find out about
other
> loans/grants/aid?
>
>
>


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