Archive for Financial Aid – Page 9

Yellow Ribbon Reminder

The application for the Yellow Ribbon scholarship will be live on Monday, June 10th at 12:00pm EDT (tomorrow).  SIPA students who qualify at the 100% level for the Post 9/11 GI Bill may apply for consideration.  Under the Post 9/11 GI Bill, eligibility for the Yellow Ribbon Program is determined on a first-come, first-served basis.  The application will be available at:  http://new.sipa.columbia.edu/admissions/applying-to-sipa/applying-for-financial-aid under a link that will be labeled “Yellow Ribbon Program Application.”

If you are a veteran of the US Armed Forces and would like to learn more about eligibility for these benefits, please visit the GI Bill website at www.gibill.va.gov/.

 

tie a Yellow Ribbon

SIPA is committed to honoring those who have served our country by being one of seventeen individual schools at Columbia University participating in the Yellow Ribbon Program.

The Yellow Ribbon Program is an initiative authorized by the Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2008 (the Post-9/11 GI Bill) in which educational institutions provide eligible student veterans with a tuition waiver or grant matched by the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs. This program supplements the base educational benefits provided by the Post-9/11 GI Bill.  To be eligible for the Yellow Ribbon Program, you must be a US veteran eligible for the maximum level (100%) of benefits under the Post-9/11 GI Bill according to your VA Certificate of Eligibility. If you are a veteran of the US Armed Forces and would like to learn more about eligibility for these benefits, please visit the GI Bill website at www.gibill.va.gov/.

An application is required and will be available on Monday, June 10, 2013 at 12pm EDT (New York) at http://new.sipa.columbia.edu/admissions/applying-to-sipa/applying-for-financial-aid under a link that will be labeled “Yellow Ribbon Program Application.”

Prior recipients must apply if interested in receiving the scholarship; it is not automatically renewed.   SIPA cannot guarantee funding for every eligible candidate, and funding will be on a first come, first served basis.

For general information about Veteran Affairs at Columbia University, please visit: www.veteranaffairs.columbia.edu.

 

Columbia University Interschool fellowships available

Applications for 2013-14 Interschool Fellowships are now available.  To see if you may meet the eligibility criteria required to apply, please review:  http://sfs.columbia.edu/grad-institutional-aid.  To apply please click here.  The deadline to submit your application to the SIPA Financial Aid Office is Monday, June 10th.  Please contact SIPA Financial Aid at [email protected] or 212-854-6216 with questions.

 

Funding your SIPA education (as an international student) – part 8

If you are an international student (or will be), you may be faced with some challenges in identifying funding sources available for studying in the US.  But each year, approximately half of SIPA’s students are international, and each of them has found their own way to meet the costs associated with furthering their education overseas.

As you are probably aware, SIPA offers a number of scholarships for first year students, and scholarships and assistantships for students in their second year of study.  All of these awards are available to international students.  All applicants for admission are automatically considered for funding during their first year, and all interested students should apply for second year funding during the application period (typically early in the spring semester).  Some international students borrow students loans from private lenders while studying here (loans from the US Government are not available to international students).  For more information and a list of lenders that international students at Columbia University have had success with, click here.   Please note lenders require international students to have a US citizen or permanent resident as a co-signer.

We certainly recommend that students thoroughly investigate all forms of assistance from government or private sources in their own countries.  Many international students at SIPA have been supported by their governments, employers or other agencies while studying here.  There are also resources available from entities in the United States and elsewhere that may be helpful, and we have compiled a list of websites that contain information that may be of use to international students seeking funding:

http://www.foreignborn.com/study_in_us/8-paying4school.htm

http://www.intlstudent.org/scholarships.html

http://scholarships.berkeley.edu/main_content/schol_details/pdf/int_student_opportunities.pdf

http://www.iefa.org/

http://www.usnews.com/education/blogs/the-scholarship-coach/2012/03/22/an-international-students-guide-to-us-scholarships

http://www.edupass.org/finaid/

http://www.fundingusstudy.org/StateSearch.asp

SIPA’s Financial Aid Office also has a database of external funding opportunities; although it is not specifically for international students (and admittedly has some dead links that we will soon be in the process of cleaning up as SIPA transitions to a new website), we encourage you to visit that site as well.  Click here for details.

Financing your education at SIPA – Part 7

Our last post about financing your education focused on student loan repayments options to consider when you’re first thinking about taking out a loan or when you’re weighing your repayment options as you prepare to graduate from SIPA (or any other institution).

One new initiative that we’re excited about at SIPA is the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program.  Under this program, student borrowers who pursue careers in the non-profit or public service sectors can have their outstanding loan balance forgiven after 120 months of repayment.  This forgiveness program applies to Federal Direct Loans (also known as Stafford Loans), Graduate PLUS loans, and Federal Direct Consolidation Loans.  It is not available for Federal Perkins Loans or any type of private loans.

If a student borrower qualifies for the Income Based Repayment program (available to borrowers with lower incomes during repayment), the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program can save a borrower a considerable amount of money; depending on the amount borrowed, maybe tens of thousands of dollars.  As many SIPA students seek out such employment before, during and after graduation, this is an initiative that we want all SIPA students who borrow to be aware of.  For more information, visit any of these websites:

www.studentaid.ed.gov/publicservice

http://www.myfedloan.org/manage-account/loan-forgiveness-discharge-programs/public-service-loan-forgiveness.shtml

http://www.finaid.org/loans/publicservice.phtml

These 120 monthly payments need not be consecutive; for instance, if you start working in the non-profit sector immediately after graduating, work for a while in the private sector but then return to non-profit, you could still qualify.  However, you do have to make 120 monthly payments while working in the non-profit sector.  Your loan servicer will need verification of employment.  Note: while paying off your loan quickly (in 10 years or less) will save you money by minimizing interest, it will also prevent you from being able to take advantage of Public Service Loan Forgiveness, because if after the 120 monthly payments you have no remaining balance, there will be no outstanding loan amount to be forgiven.  It cannot be applied retroactively to loan amounts already paid off.

Non-profit or public sector employment may include any of the following:

–       A Federal, State, local, or Tribal government organization, agency, or entity;

–       A public child or family service agency;

–       Volunteering full-time in the Peace Corps or AmeriCorps;

–       A non-profit organization under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code that is exempt from taxation under section 501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code;

–       A Tribal college or university; or

–       A private non-profit organization (that is not a labor union or a partisan political organization) that provides at least one of the following public services:

Emergency management

Military service

Public safety or law enforcement

Public interest law services

Early childhood education (including licensed or regulated child care, Head Start, and state-funded pre-kindergarten)

Public service for individuals with disabilities and the elderly

Public health (including nurses, nurse practitioners, nurses in a clinical setting, and full-time professionals engaged in health care practitioner occupations and health care support occupations)

Public education or other school-based services

Public or school library services

This employment must be full-time (an average of at least 30 hours a week) and while in most cases the exact nature of the work does not matter, it cannot include religious instruction or worship, or any kind of proselytizing.  Work for a labor union or partisan political organization also does not count as public service for purposes of this program.

There are circumstances in which your student loans can’t be forgiven but at least you would be able to halt payments temporarily.  This is called either deferment or forbearance, and is applicable for enrolling at least half-time in a degree program, serving in the military (including the National Guard or Reserves), unemployed or experiencing economic hardship, or serving in the Peace Corps.  In some cases, interest may continue to accrue on your loans, which you would ultimately be responsible for, but deferment or forbearance may help a borrower out during times that making loan payments would create a hardship.  For more information, visit these sites:

http://studentaid.ed.gov/repay-loans

http://studentaid.ed.gov/repay-loans/deferment-forbearance

If you choose to borrow student loans to attend SIPA, online entrance counseling will be provided so you can get more details about your rights and responsibilities as a borrower.  But if you have questions at any time or would like to learn more about borrowing, feel free to contact us at [email protected].

 

"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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