Become your child's best informed college advisor. SIGN UP to learn about:
  • Financial aid and scholarships
  • Successful application strategies
  • Campus safety
  • Dates and deadlines
  • Career planning

  *

Ask the experts

Follow Me

Discovering Scholarship and Loan Options

When you think "scholarship", do you automatically think "straight-A" student? And do you think that leaves your student out in the cold?

Well, you may be wrong. There are many, many sources of scholarships, and not all of them require high school grades in the stratosphere. Average students who are outstanding in nonacademic ways can also win big scholarship money.

For instance, is your student a skateboarding whiz? A budding entrepreneur? A community volunteer? There are scholarships recognizing all those qualities. Others reward athletic achievement, artistic merit, creativity, strength of character, acts of kindness— even the ability to fashion a prom outfit out of duct tape! Read about all kinds of unusual "average student" scholarships, and start applying now. Some sponsors make awards as early as freshman year of high school.

Scholarships and Grants

For a comprehensive look at traditional and nontraditional scholarship and grant opportunities, try these sources:

Books
Peterson's Scholarship Almanac
The Scholarship Handbook
Scholarships, Grants, and Prizes

Online
www.fastweb.com
www.scholarships.com
www.finaid.org
www.studentaid.edu.gov

Don't overlook local and community sources, such as religious groups, civic organizations and local corporations. Ask your student's high school guidance counselor for a list of local scholarships.

Loans

Scholarships, grants and loans from a federally funded program may not be enough to cover costs. You might consider a private loan to make up the difference. However, experts recommend this step only after other options are exhausted.