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HOW TO APPLY FOR THE FINANCIAL AID
The economic aid you are eligible for is based on your economic circumstances, your performance as a student and your further skills. Almost everybody is entitled to some type of help. You just need to find out which one applies to you. If a loan is applicable, you must choose the one that best fits your future economic conditions as you foresee them.
You can use your PIN to:
Student Aid Report (SAR) will summarize the information you completed on your FAFSA and will include the Estimated Family Contribution. Review the SAR to make sure it is right and carefully read the instructions on how to send the SAR to the Financial Aid Office of the schools or colleges you have chosen. They will contact you back and let you know which economic aid options you can choose. Award Letter Award Letter: The financial aid office of the universities or colleges where you have sent the SAR will send you a letter with the information about what type of financial aid you qualify for, and the amount of money you can receive by scholarships, grants, federal or private loans or working-study programs (if you have applied for a work-study program), including a possible combination of all types of financial aid. Award letters include the following information:
= Financial Need Before you sign up the award letter accepting the financial terms and conditions of the aid they offer to you, you should review carefully the letter, and if you have applied for enrolment in different universities, wait until you have received the rest of the award letters in order to compare which is the best offer to you, the one that best fits to your needs. Sometimes it may come as a surprise that an expensive university will in fact give you a very good financial aid program, especially if you happen to be a brilliant student. Remember that you don't need to accept everything offered by the school, but if you decline anything, the school will not replace it with other types of aid. Maybe, under specific financial and private circumstances, you can negotiate work-study and loans, but grants and scholarships are not negotiable. If your financial data or your parents financial circumstances have changed after completing the FAFSA, you should communicate this to the financial aid department. Don’t forget there are deadlines for applying to FAFSA. Ask for information and find out which are the documents you need in your particular university or college.
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