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Your impression of the documents you were asked to sign does not comport with my recollection of the contracts I was presented with. As federal loans are a fairly standardized product, you can trivially find their contracts online. Here's one of the examples for Sallie Mae: http://www.studentlendinganalytics.com/images/Sallie_Mae_Pro... This document, in style and length, comports with my recollection of what I signed ~15 years ago. 8 pages; approximately the length of an apartment lease. The language should not tax the reading comprehension abilities of a college student. Representative sample: Interest on this note will accrue at the Variable Rate (as defined below), beginning on the first Disbursement Date, on the principal balance advanced and on the Capitalized Interest, Fees, and Other Amounts, until the principal balance and all interest are paid in full. The Variable Rate will be used to calculate interest during the entire term of this Note, and following the maturity of, or any default under, this Note; there is no initially discounted, premium, or other rate that will be used to calculate interest under this Note. |
I don't think this matches most peoples' experience. I think it usually goes like this...
You walk into the "financial aid" office where you sit nervously while they ask you meaningless (to the cost) questions while they click at a spreadsheet. After you stew for a while they present you with a price that looks like it could fund a trip to the moon (the 'list price'). You panic and then they say "but don't worry, financial aid"!
What you don't know is that while they're piecing together your "package" what they are really doing is figuring out how much they can borrow on your behalf to claim for themselves. After they've exhausted every external loan, grant and scholarship out there (its a big list and they are good at their job) they declare the rest of that impossible number a generous scholarship provided by the university. You made it! Welcome to Scruew U! You're so relieved just to be in the door you start signing paper as fast as it comes at you. That number looked impossible but somehow you're in! It looks like they busted their butt to help you out, but really, they figured out how to extract maximum payment from you, used car salesman style.
It will take you a long time to figure out exactly what your responsibilities are with regard to that witch's brew of loan, scholarship, and grant. Just wait until next year when you're invested and some of your grants and scholarships expire or reduce!