Not sure that I will be able to afford school….Help, anyone?
Favorite Answer
You have a few options:
– earn more (work 50, 60 hours) for a while and push back your school projects for a year. You’ll be able to save that 4000$.
– keep looking for a student loan or grants. Look if you can fit into a scholarship.
– spend less money : I know it may sound impossible to do, but there’s a few tips that helped me a lot :
– no more coffee at work. I bring mine.
200 work days X 2$ = 400$
– I changed my cable TV package.
Save 12$/month, 144$/year.
– I changed my cell phone package.
+12$/month for more minutes, -50$/month in surprise “over minutes”.
One year save : 38$X12= 456$
– I take my car 2 times a week to go to work. 3 days of bus.
3 X 12$ savings = 36$/week
One year = 1500$
– No more newspapers on weekdays.
52 X 3$ = 156 $
– I cut restaurants.
3 (days/w) X 7$ (savings/day) X 48 weeks = 1008$
– Home foods : I try to prepare my own meals. I do not buy prepared food anymore (soups, ready-to-serve meals, frozen meals, soft drinks, cookies, sauces, even bread crumbs). The truth is that you pay and incredibly high price for these. You pay a restaurant price to eat at home. You can do cookies, soups, creams, sauces, even bread if you are motivated. And it’s better for your health. I save a lot that way and it gives my family good reasons to hang together in the kitchen cooking food for everybody.
30$/week X 52 weeks = 1560$
Total :
400
144
456
1500
156
1008
1560
____
Total : 5224$ in savings due to my lifestyle change
Move on. Do your list and save.
Good luck !
Going from a 2-year college to a university, I found that I was academically ahead of many of my peers (having already fulfilled my general ed, I was able to take classes within my actual major), and I only paid a fraction of what they paid to take their gen. ed. at a university. As most students change their majors mid-college career, the costs add up, so better to change your mind where it’s more cost efficient. If you have the option to go to a community college first and then transfer, this is something I highly recommend.
If you choose to go directly to a 4-year, a community college is still a great resource for information on scholarships. Usually each community college has a student or resource center – go to the front desk and ask them where they keep their scholarship info. I applied for and got scholarships and grants at my 2-year that really helped me out in my 4-year. Another money saving option is to check out some of your textbooks at the university library, then xerox the assignments – I did this, and it’s time consuming, but when you’re broke and need books, you do what you have to do :o)
Good luck to you. It’s been a decade since I went to school, but it seems like yesterday. I worked two jobs and took two buses to get through college. But it was all worth it.