Monday, August 21, 2017
Friday, August 18, 2017
Financial Fridays-Free Application for Student Financial Aid
What's the FAFSA? And Why You Should Care
Completing the FAFSA will help you earn federal financial aid.
By The Fastweb Team
August 17, 2017
You must submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) if you want to apply for federal and state financial aid. Many colleges and universities, especially public institutions, also require the FAFSA. You must submit the FAFSA every year that you want aid.
Obtaining a FAFSA
The FAFSA is available in several formats, including online, PDF and paper versions.
The best option is to complete the web-based version of the FAFSA at www.fafsa.ed.gov, known as FAFSA on the Web. It includes step-by-step instructions for completing the online FAFSA as well as preapplication worksheets. You can obtain a PIN to electronically sign the form by visiting www.pin.ed.gov. If you have technical questions about using FAFSA on the Web, call 1-800-4-FED-AID.
FAFSA on the Web offers several benefits, including:
- You will get your Student Aid Report (SAR) sooner than with the paper or PDF forms.
- Your FAFSA will be more accurate, since the FAFSA on the Web has built-in edit checks to catch simple errors and you avoid errors introduced by the OCR process.
- You will save the federal government money by reducing their processing costs.
- The online FAFSA allows you to list up to ten colleges, while the paper FAFSA has space only for four colleges.
Most families complete the FAFSA online these days.
Paper versions are no longer bulk-distributed to high schools, colleges and libraries, with a few exceptions. (The exceptions involve organizations that work with underrepresented populations and students that do not have access to the Internet or a phone.) However, students may obtain up to three copies of the paper version by calling 1-800-4-FED-AID(1-800-433-3242) or 1-391-337-5665. (Hearing impaired individuals should call the TTYnumber 1-800-730-8913.) Paper FAFSAs can be ordered starting November 1 of each year.
Note that the FAFSA may not be submitted before October 1, even if the paper and PDFversions are available sooner.
EFC Calculators
FinAid’s Financial Aid Estimation Form may be used to calculate your EFC and an estimate of your eligibility for financial aid. This may help you understand a bit about how the federal need analysis system works. You can also run “what-if” experiments to see how much aid you’ll get under various scenarios. FinAid also has a QuickEFC calculator that uses much fewer questions to yield a ballpark estimate of your EFC.
Like FinAid’s EFC calculator, the US Department of Education’s FAFSA4CASTER tool also provides an early estimate of financial aid eligible. It is similar to FAFSA on the Web, but omits a handful of questions (e.g., drug conviction, selective service, parent education level, list of colleges, signatures). The FinAid tool provides more detailed analysis and more detailed aid eligibility information, but FAFSA4CASTER will potentially be linked with FAFSA on the Web for prefilling the answers to some of the FAFSA questions.
By The Fastweb Team
August 17, 2017
You must submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) if you want to apply for federal and state financial aid. Many colleges and universities, especially public institutions, also require the FAFSA. You must submit the FAFSA every year that you want aid.
Obtaining a FAFSA
The FAFSA is available in several formats, including online, PDF and paper versions.
The best option is to complete the web-based version of the FAFSA at www.fafsa.ed.gov, known as FAFSA on the Web. It includes step-by-step instructions for completing the online FAFSA as well as preapplication worksheets. You can obtain a PIN to electronically sign the form by visiting www.pin.ed.gov. If you have technical questions about using FAFSA on the Web, call 1-800-4-FED-AID.
FAFSA on the Web offers several benefits, including:
- You will get your Student Aid Report (SAR) sooner than with the paper or PDF forms.
- Your FAFSA will be more accurate, since the FAFSA on the Web has built-in edit checks to catch simple errors and you avoid errors introduced by the OCR process.
- You will save the federal government money by reducing their processing costs.
- The online FAFSA allows you to list up to ten colleges, while the paper FAFSA has space only for four colleges.
Most families complete the FAFSA online these days.
Paper versions are no longer bulk-distributed to high schools, colleges and libraries, with a few exceptions. (The exceptions involve organizations that work with underrepresented populations and students that do not have access to the Internet or a phone.) However, students may obtain up to three copies of the paper version by calling 1-800-4-FED-AID(1-800-433-3242) or 1-391-337-5665. (Hearing impaired individuals should call the TTYnumber 1-800-730-8913.) Paper FAFSAs can be ordered starting November 1 of each year.
Note that the FAFSA may not be submitted before October 1, even if the paper and PDFversions are available sooner.
EFC Calculators
FinAid’s Financial Aid Estimation Form may be used to calculate your EFC and an estimate of your eligibility for financial aid. This may help you understand a bit about how the federal need analysis system works. You can also run “what-if” experiments to see how much aid you’ll get under various scenarios. FinAid also has a QuickEFC calculator that uses much fewer questions to yield a ballpark estimate of your EFC.
Like FinAid’s EFC calculator, the US Department of Education’s FAFSA4CASTER tool also provides an early estimate of financial aid eligible. It is similar to FAFSA on the Web, but omits a handful of questions (e.g., drug conviction, selective service, parent education level, list of colleges, signatures). The FinAid tool provides more detailed analysis and more detailed aid eligibility information, but FAFSA4CASTER will potentially be linked with FAFSA on the Web for prefilling the answers to some of the FAFSA questions.
Thursday, August 17, 2017
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
Teaching Tuesdays-Run on Sentences
Run-On Sentences
A run-on sentence occurs when two or more independent clauses (also known as complete sentences) are connected improperly.
Example: I love to write papers I would write one every day if I had the time.
There are two complete sentences in the above example:
Sentence 1: I love to write papers.
Sentence 2: I would write one every day if I had the time.
One common type of run-on sentence is a comma splice. A comma splice occurs when two independent clauses are joined with just a comma.
Example of a comma splice: Participants could leave the study at any time, they needed to indicate their preference.
Sentence 1: Participants could leave the study at any time.
Sentence 2: They needed to indicate their preference.
Some comma splices occur when a writer attempts to use a transitional expression in the middle of a sentence.
Example of a comma splice: The results of the study were inconclusive, therefore more research needs to be done on the topic.
Sentence 1: The results of the study were inconclusive
Transitional expression (conjunctive adverb): therefore
Sentence 2: More research needs to be done on the topic
To fix this type of comma splice, use a semicolon before the transitional expression and add a comma after it. See more examples of this on the semicolon page.
Revision: The results of the study were inconclusive; therefore, more research needs to be done on the topichttp://academicguides.waldenu.edu/writingcenter/grammar/runonsentences.
Monday, August 14, 2017
Math Monday-Geometric Formula Review
Geometric Formula Review
Purplemath
There are many geometric formulas, and they relate height, width, length, or radius, etc, to perimeter, area, surface area, or volume, etc. Some of the formulas are rather complicated, and you hardly ever see them, let alone use them. But there are some basic formulas that you really should memorize, because it really is reasonable for your instructor to expect you to know them.
For instance, it is very easy to find the area A of a rectangle: it is just the length l times the width w:
Arect = lw
The "rect" in the formula above is a subscript, indicating that the area "A" being found is that of a rectangle. Because I'm going to be discussing area, volume, etc, formulas for different shapes, I'm using the subscripts to make clear the shape to which the particular formula refers (while using "A" for "area", "SA" for "surface area", "P" for "perimeter", and "V" for "volume"). Subscripting of this sort can be a useful technique for making your meaning clear, so try to keep this in the back of your mind for possible future use.
If you look at a picture of a rectangle, and remember that "perimeter" means "length around the outside", you'll see that a rectangle's perimeter P is the sum of the top and bottom lengths l and the left and right widths w:
Prect = 2l + 2w
Squares are even simpler, because their lengths and widths are identical. The area A and perimeter P of a square with side-length s are given by:
Asqr = s2
Psqr = 4s
You should know the formula for the area of a triangle; it's easy to memorize, and it tends to pop up unexpectedly in the middle of word problems. Given the measurements for the base b and the height h of the triangle, the area Aof the triangle is:
A tri = 2 1 bh
Of course, the perimeter P of the triangle will just be the sum of the lengths of the triangle's three sides.
You should know the formula for the circumference C and area A of a circle, given the radius r:
Acir = πr2
Ccir = 2πr
("π" is the number approximated by 3.14159 or the fraction 22/7)
Remember that the radius of a circle is the distance from the center to the outside of a circle. In other words, the radius is just halfway across. If they give you the length of the diameter, being the length of a line through the middle going all the way across the circle, then you'll first have to divide that value in half in order to apply the above formulas.
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The above are all "flat", two-dimensional shapes. Sometimes you will have to deal with three-dimensional shapes, such as cubes or cones. For these kinds of shapes, you'll be finding the surface area (if you were painting the object, this is the area that you'd have to cover) and the volume (being the interior space that you could fill, were the shape hollow).
The formula for the volume V of a cube is easy, since the length, the width, and the height are all the same value s:
Vcube = s3
The formula for the surface area (the area you would measure if you needed to paint the ouside of the cube) is fairly easy, too, since all the sides have the same square area of s2. There are six sides (top, bottom, left, right, front, and back), so the surface area SA is:
SAcube= 6s2
The formulas get a bit more complicated for a "rectangular prism", which is the technical term for a brick. The volume V is still fairly simple, being length times width times height:
Vrect = lwh
The surface area formula is a bit more ornate. (Try to follow the reasoning that I'm going to use, because you'll probably forget the formula, but it's easy to recreate if you just take a little time and think about it.) The top and bottom of the "brick" have the same area, being length times width. The left and right sides of the brick have the same area, being width times height. And the front and back of the brick have the same area, being length times height. (Draw a picture, labelling the dimensions, if you're not sure of this.) Then the formula for the surface area SA of a brick is:
SArect= 2lw + 2wh + 2lh
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Cylinders (which are like tubes, but with caps on the ends) also come up occasionally. The volume V of a cylinder is easy: it's the area of the end (which is just the area of the circle) times the height h:
Vcyl = πr2h
The surface area SA is the area of the ends (which are just circles), plus the area of the side, which is a circle's circumference times the height h of the cylinder:
SAcyl = 2πr2 + 2πrh
Depending on the class you're taking, you might also need to know the formula for the volume V of a cone with base radius r and height h:
V cone = 3 1 πr 2
...or the volume V of a sphere (a ball) with radius r:
V sph = 3 4 πr 3
You may notice other formulas cropping up in your homework or classroom exercises. You may need to memorize these other formulas (there are many!), so be sure to check with your instructor before the test to learn which you will be expected to know.
Friday, August 11, 2017
Thursday, August 10, 2017
Thursday Throught
"Life can only be understood backward, but it must be lived forward"-Soren Kierkegaard
What do you think this quote means? How can you apply the quote's message to your daily life?
What do you think this quote means? How can you apply the quote's message to your daily life?
Wednesday, August 9, 2017
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
Monday, August 7, 2017
Math Mondays
Read through the example of how to solve investment problems and solve for the example at the bottom.
Friday, August 4, 2017
Thursday, August 3, 2017
Thursday Thought
Do you believe the heavy financial impact of education has affected students' and their families?
Wednesday, August 2, 2017
Tuesday, August 1, 2017
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