Paying for College Archives - 91łÔąĎ /category/blog/ll-financial-aid/ Walk a different path. Tue, 10 Jun 2025 12:47:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Why is FAFSA Important? | The Three Reasons to File ASAP /why-is-fafsa-important-the-three-reasons-to-file-asap/ Fri, 30 May 2025 14:54:56 +0000 /?p=95775

The academic year is over and summer is here! For some, college is on the horizon. For others, it’s the very thing you’re taking a break from. Whether you’re preparing to start college for the first time or returning for another year, one essential task looms on the horizon: filing your .

Each year, as you dig through tax forms and answer what feels like a million questions, you might find yourself wondering, “Why is FAFSA important?”

With the exception of the past two years, the FAFSA typically opens in October—so enjoy your summer, stress-free. Once it does become available, however, we recommend filing as soon as possible—whether it’s your first time or your final year. If you need a reason to get moving, we’ve boiled it down to three benefits.

Jump to:

You'll Be as Informed as Possible
An Informed Decision is Your Best Decision

When you complete your FAFSA as early as possible, both the government and your colleges can send you your financial aid information sooner. Why does this matter—especially as early as October—if you’re not planning to make any final decision until March or April? Or, why does it matter if this is your fourth time filing?

If you’re a first-time student comparing schools or a returning student reassessing financial aid, early FAFSA filing gives you more time to evaluate your offers. Tuition costs, scholarship amounts, and government loan amounts can change from year to year. Seeing your full financial picture early helps you compare colleges, negotiate offers, and determine what’s truly affordable.

Additionally, college counselors often encourage students to review and compare multiple financial aid packages. Early filing gives you the tools you need to do that with confidence. For returning students, it allows you to adjust plans if funding changes or new options arise.

You Can Plan for Your Financial Future
Don’t Just Plan for College. Plan for Post-Graduation

Filing your FAFSA early doesn’t just help with your immediate college plans. It’s also key to long-term financial success—especially if your aid package includes loans.

If you know early on that you’ll need to borrow money, you’ll have more time to explore repayment options, plan budgets, and avoid surprises. First-year students can start thinking long-term right away, and returning students can re-evaluate how much they’re borrowing year over year.

In short, FAFSA is important because understanding your financial outlook now helps you prepare for life after graduation.

You’ll Meet Scholarship Requirements—and Receive Maximum Aid
You Know What They Say About the Early Bird

Here’s perhaps the biggest reason of all: filing your FAFSA early can help you maximize your aid. The sooner you apply, the more funding is available—from both the government and your current or prospective college(s).

University scholarships aren’t unlimited, and some are awarded on a first-come, first-served basis. Filing early shows initiative and can unlock awards before funds run out.

Additionally, many external scholarships require a completed FAFSA. Filing as soon as it opens means you’ll already have one major requirement checked off your list.

Why is FAFSA Important? | Conclusion
Sooner or later, it comes around.

Filing the FAFSA is a yearly reality for most college students. For first-year students, it can feel especially overwhelming, coinciding with the excitement and stress of choosing a college. For returning students, it’s a key opportunity to reassess your financial standing.

The good news? Submitting your FAFSA early doesn’t lock you into anything. You can send it to multiple schools without committing to any one. It simply gives you time, options, and negotiating power; in other words, the keys to making smart financial decisions for college and beyond.

If it’s your first time filing the FAFSA or you need a refresher, check out our up-to-date 2026–2027 FAFSA Guide.

FAFSA guide
Life and Learning
Laura Rossi

Your 2026–2027 FAFSA Guide

The 2026–2027 FAFSA Guide last updated: May 22, 2025 Everything You Need to Know About the 2026–2027 FAFSA In the past two years, the process for filing your FAFSA has been chaotic, to say the least. Changing deadlines, website restructuring, beta-testing, and more caused delays, confusion, and frustration for institutions

Read More »
]]>
Your 2026–2027 FAFSA Guide /fafsa-guide/ Wed, 21 May 2025 14:25:04 +0000 /?p=79962

The 2026–2027 FAFSA Guide last updated: May 22, 2025

Everything You Need to Know About the 2026–2027 FAFSA

In the past two years, the process for filing your has been chaotic, to say the least. Changing deadlines, website restructuring, beta-testing, and more caused delays, confusion, and frustration for institutions and families alike.Ěý

This year, the Department of Education indicates they will reinstate the normal FAFSA dates. For some, however, “normal” may not be familiar to you. If this is your first, second, or millionth time filling out the FAFSA as a student or parent, let us give you this comprehensive guide to help give you everything you may need to know about the process.

Jump to:

2026–2027 FAFSA Timeline

Below is a timeline, based on when the FAFSA becomes available, that we recommend you follow in order to receive your financial aid information as soon as possible.

October 1, 2025 FAFSA becomes available. (Recommended filing time)
January 1, 2026 New year begins.
1–2 weeks following submission Cairn receives your FAFSA
2–4 weeks following receiving your FAFSA Cairn begins sending out Offers of Aid.
June 30, 2027 26-27 FAFSA Deadline
Tips for a Smooth Application Process
  • Ensure the student completes his or her application first.

    Then, invite the parent/guardian as a “contributor” and only then should the parent complete their portion. *If you are creating an FSA ID for the first time, please note it could take up to 4 days for your ID to be processed and verified*

  • Check the parent filing status.

    Only add one parent to your FAFSA if your parent’s tax status for 2023 was “married filing jointly”.

  • Identify legal name changes.

    If you changed your legal name before you created your account with Federal Student Aid (FSA), be sure to use your new name when creating the account. If you changed your legal name after you create your FSA account, please update your name before completing the FAFSA. If you changed your legal name after completing the FAFSA. you may need to call FSA to adjust your application. You can call 1-800-433-3243 to learn more.

  • After submission, wait to make additional changes.

    After submitting the FAFSA, we recommend that you do not go back to make corrections to your FAFSA until Cairn has received your initial application.

  • Contact Financial Aid if you have any questions.

    finaid@cairn.edu is the best way to reach us!

Additional Resources
Ěý
  • Cairn Scholarship Estimator is a great way to get a more accurate approximation of what your aid could look like for Cairn. Our admission staff will review your submission and contact you shortly to discuss your aid.
  • is the new calculation for determining student financial need. The SAI estimator assesses the Federal funding a student can receive.

Remember, we are here to help! If this FAFSA Guide is missing questions or concerns you have, you can contact Student Financial Services at finaid@cairn.edu with any questions, or you can learn more at about our tuition and financial aid at cairn.edu/aid.Ěý

The 2026–2027 FAFSA Guide last updated: May 22, 2025

]]>
Your Toolkit for College Financial Aid Planning /your-toolkit-for-college-financial-aid-planning/ Tue, 14 Jan 2025 16:44:31 +0000 /?p=93726

There’s a lot to navigate in the college financial aid world. With the right guidance and resources, however, you can confidently make the best financial decisions for your education. Whether you’re a prospective college student or a parent looking to support your student, this toolkit covers it all—from definitions and resources to comprehensive “how-to’s” and how 91łÔąĎ’s Student Financial Services Office can help you. We’re here to support you in the college financial aid planning process!

The Basics of College Financial Aid Planning

college financial aid planning

Understanding Terminology

Financial aid helps make higher education accessible by covering some or all of your tuition, fees, and related expenses. You can rely that they generally fall into these categories:

Financial Aid Terminology

Grants Scholarships Work-Study Programs Loans
Money that doesn’t need to be repaid, often awarded based on financial need (e.g., Pell Grants) Money typically awarded based on merit, skills, or other criteria Part-time jobs for students to earn money toward their education Borrowed money that must be repaid with interest

Now that you have the basic terminologies down, consider these resources below and assess what steps you can take to understand your college financial situation better.

Financial Aid Tools and Resources:

This wouldn’t be a very good financial aid planning blog if we only gave you terms. Below, you can check out resources that aim to help you save money, find loan options, and explore other financial aid resources:

For scholarships, it is important to remember that applying to ones externally may mean they won’t all apply to every college you are interested in, but it never hurts to try and see what you get!

You can also check out Cairn’s internal aid and scholarship resources to give you a better idea of what to expect from us:

Additionally, FAFSA resources are essential to understanding the somewhat complex application process. Below, you can find links to both the FAFSA site and our own tips and tricks for filling out the FAFSA that we regularly update each academic year.

A Step-by-Step Guide to Discovering Your Financial Aid Options

College Financial Aid Planning
  1. Apply to Colleges
    1. That way, you know what ID codes to use when filling out the FAFSA.
  2. Fill out the FAFSA
    1. Submitting a is your next step in college financial aid planning. It determines eligibility for federal grants, loans, and work-study programs, so the sooner you complete this, the sooner a college can give you a comprehensive offer of aid letter. Even if you think you won’t qualify, we still recommend you submit the FAFSA—it’s required for many scholarships and institutional aid.

      Ěý

      P.S.—For other tips and up-to-date information about the FAFSA each year, check out our blog, the 2026–2027 FAFSA Guide!

  3. Explore State and Institutional Aid
    1. Many states and colleges offer their own financial aid programs. Be sure to research deadlines and requirements for these opportunities.
  4. Search for Scholarships
    1. Scholarships come in all shapes and sizes. There are merit-based scholarships, need-based scholarships, and those based on unique talents, demographics, or career aspirations.
  5. Compare Financial Aid Offers
    1. Once you’ve been accepted and received your financial aid packages, compare them carefully. Look at the mix of grants, scholarships, loans, and work-study to determine your out-of-pocket costs

Questions to consider when comparing financial aid offers:

When speaking to financial aid offices or your college counselors, be sure to ask them the right questions to get the best understanding of your aid package. You can use these as ideas:

Ěý

  • Will a less expensive school still have the quality experience I am looking for in a college?
  • Have I explored all my scholarship options in each cost break-down area?
  • Is my current and expected future financial situation going to work with my potential long-term repayment plan?
  • How often will my financial aid be reviewed, and can it increase or decrease?
  • What is the job placement rate and average starting salary for graduates in my intended major?
  • Does the school offer flexibility if my financial situation changes (e.g., job loss, medical expenses)?
  • Can the school match or increase its offer if another school provides a better financial aid package?


Top 5 Tips for Maximizing Aid

college financial aid planning
  • Apply Early: The earlier you apply for financial aid, the better your chances of receiving assistance.
  • Be Thorough: Don’t leave any application questions blank and ensure all documents are accurate.
  • Seek Advice: Cairn’s financial aid counselors are available to answer questions and provide guidance.
  • Complete Loan Counseling if you are taking out federal loans. This is required to help you understand your responsibilities as a borrower.
  • Reapply Annually: Financial aid isn’t a one-time process. You’ll need to complete the FAFSA each year.

Financial Aid at 91łÔąĎ

Our Student Financial Services (SFS) Office is dedicated to helping students and families navigate the financial aid process. Whether you want to ask about scholarship options, need clarification about your aid package, or require information about payment plans, they’re your department! Consider in detail the following ways they can assist you:

Institutional Aid and Scholarships

Cairn offers and accepts a wide range of scholarships and grants, including:

  • Merit-Based Scholarships: Awarded based on your academic achievements.
  • Need-Based Aid: Assessed through your FAFSA submission.
  • Specialty Scholarships: For students in specific programs or with unique qualifications like our church matching scholarship.

Personalized Support for Your College Financial Aid Planning

The Student Financial Services (SFS) Office provides personalized assistance to help you:

  • Understand your financial aid packages
  • Set up payment plans that work for their budget
  • Connect you with external scholarship opportunities

Work-Study Opportunities/ On Campus Jobs

Cairn offers on-campus work-study positions to help students gain experience while earning money for your education. While this won’t be something you can apply directly to your offer of aid, it can still be considered a resource to help you earn money without leaving the campus.

College Financial Aid Planning: Your Success Story

Paying for college is a significant investment, but with proper planning and support, you can make it manageable. The right resources and strategies will help you focus less on finances and more on your education and future. Apply to Cairn to start your financial aid planning today!

Apply to Cairn Today!

]]>
Thinking Carefully About Student Debt: Some Basic Considerations /thinking-biblically-about-student-debt/ Tue, 06 Apr 2021 18:40:55 +0000 /?p=42968 How Can We Think Carefully About Student Debt?Ěý

College can be expensive. Students and their parents are often forced to make difficult decisions on borrowing money—and this can cause a lot of angst. So there’s a big question: to loan, or not to loan?Ěý
There is no need to qualify the problem of debt in the US. Consumer debt has not only become a way of life but a major problem for so many Americans. It’s also clear that college debt causes a similar problem. What’s not clear is how parents and students looking for an education should think of debt—especially from a biblical perspective.Ěý
Generation X was likely the first generation to take on the massive college loans that are now normal. And as they start sending their own kids to college, this puts everyone in an interesting position. Now Gen X is coming to terms with their decisions of 20-some years ago. Many Gen Xers signed pieces of paper they barely understood leading to massive loans and often incomes that were far too meager to make repayment manageable. When they look at college for their kids, many ask one big question they might not have considered themselves: what does it cost? Now, many are opposed (in some cases, even morally) to borrowing money for college.
Thus, a faulty dilemma has emerged: either one goes deeply, insouciantly, into debt; or one accepts no college debt—not one penny. There may be a third option that does not offer either bliss-is-ignorance or self-assurance benefits, but may be (in the end) more honest, satisfying, and biblical.

Not all debt is the same

To borrow money for a home, an education, a boat, a car, a watch, or a cell phone are all very different things. Each serves a different purpose, and while it would be hard to convince most people that debt is a very good thing or the ideal situation, one should admit this: boat debt and house debt can be two very different things. Not to make essential distinctions is unwise.Ěý

Not all debt-holders are the same

When some from Gen X signed school loan papers, they were ignorant of the ramifications. Those who are fully aware of what loans are, the terms, the repayment options, and lifestyle ramifications (as best as a young person can be) are not in the same scenario as those who fall blindly into debt. A person with a clear plan who borrows money with a life mission to pay it off as soon as she graduates—in as short a time as possible—is different from the one who borrows without careful consideration.Ěý

Not all college educations are the same

A biblical education is different from what one receives at community college. A transformative four-year education at a biblical university, in a biblical community, under committed Christians equipped with a deep worldview and biblical integration is a unique mission and purpose rarely repeated in the vast majority of colleges and universities.
This is not to say that no good educational opportunities exist outside of biblical universities. What this does say is this: the purposes and outcomes of a college education are not all the same. One must carefully answer this question: What is the purpose of a university education? The answer will have deep consequences, for if the purpose is simply to get a credential, perhaps the school selected is less important. But if the purpose is something much larger and formational, a biblical education may be considered far more valuable.

Not all families are the same

There are families whose children are not yet ready to leave “the nest” and for whom a less expensive college option, and even commuting, are a welcomed fit. But there are also families who fear gravely for a son or daughter who is not off alone immediately following high school.Ěý For some, the farther the better, and while it is true that there are a variety of ways and options for a young person to “get away” (and some are cheaper than others), many families may rightly conclude that this is simply the best thing for their child, and the only way for this to happen is to borrow at least some money toward the cost of a four-year transformative experience.
Consider a family with a son who is finishing high school. He’s “climbing the walls,” so ready for his independence, to face the world on his own, to learn, to grow, to prepare and explore for the future. Is this not the kind of independent, gritty young person the world is clamoring for today? Would this family be the wiser to tell such a one, “You will be staying in your room and going to the local community college because college debt is bad”?Ěý It would seem that the world has greater need for such leaders (who quickly and aggressively pay off their loans with the same pluck that brought them forth from their parents’ basements) than those who make college debt aversion their chief end.

Just what is the chief end of man?

This is the final and most central point. Why were humans created? What is our main purpose? Whether in tithing or giving, thoughts and behaviors around money, or the question of whether or not we borrow money for college, our main purpose in life as Christians is not to be so well-heeled that we give generously or to always be debt-free (though those are both good aims). Our main purpose is not even to position ourselves for success—financially, professionally, or otherwise.
No, as has been stated long ago, we were created “to glorify God and enjoy him forever.” Or to quote an even more pastoral response, “to be wholeheartedly willing and ready from now on to live for him.”Ěý
The pursuit of being debt-free is a good thing, and Christians should carefully examine all aspects of their behavior around tithing, money, and college debt—indeed, they should “work out their salvation with fear and trembling.” But to allow a principle of avoiding loans to become the paramount purpose propelling one’s action is to disorder the purpose of the Christian life. That will have far more tragic eternal consequences than any paperwork arriving, post-graduation, from Sallie Mae. We would do well to recall that we serve a sovereign God who owns “the cattle on a thousand hills” and that we ought to make choices—carefully and humbly—as pilgrims and sojourners with an eye not chiefly on this life, but on the next.

]]>
Why Working During College Makes You a Better Student /why-working-during-college-makes-you-a-better-student/ Wed, 18 Nov 2020 19:57:30 +0000 /?p=41611 More and more college students are responsible for their own college loans and personal finances. This means that more students are working part-time, or even full-time, throughout their college experience. Students either work to offset the costs of their education until they can really start paying off their loans after graduation, or they try to graduate debt-free by working as much as they can.
But there’s another reason why people work during their college years. Holding a steady job in college can actually make you a better student. Here’s why working during college isn’t just good for combatting student loan debt:
Priorities
If you’re working in college, you’ve likely got your priorities straight. You know how to put long-term goals before short-term wants. Video games can’t always come before working on an essay; hanging with friends late into the night can’t always happen before an early shift.Ěý
The responsibilities of a job establish other responsible attitudes on all that college entails. That makes you a better worker and a better student.Ěý

Time Management
A lot of what it takes to get school assignments done is proper time management. If you have a steady job that you’re faithful to, you already know what it takes to manage your time. Plus, your work and class schedules will give you clear guidelines throughout your week as to what you should be doing and when. Working a job helps you figure out how best to use your time.
Professional Development
If you’re in school while you work a part-time or full-time job, it’s more likely you know what you want to do. Say you’re in a part-time job you like but know you »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t want to stay at forever; you’re in college because you »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t want to keep doing what you do. You’re studying a different skill or topic that will get you ready for where you do want to be.Ěý
Are you in a full-time job or in a field you know you want to stay in? You’re going to college to get even better at what you do. Whether you study business to be a better sales associate or psychology to be a better behavioral health worker, your studies are helping you develop in your profession.Ěý
business career options
Dedication
It takes priorities and time management to work during college, but even more, it takes dedication. If you’re faithful and hardworking at your job, you’ve got the dedication needed to accomplish your goals. That same dedication will play a primary role in your education; you’ll give your studies the hard work they require.Ěý
Application
As you develop as a person, learner, and professional, a job gives you the opportunity to apply what you’ve gathered. Whether you try it or not, you’ll bring the knowledge from the content you’re reading and the skills you gather from professors, and you’ll be even better at your job. Additionally, programs like business and social work have internship experiences built in, so in some cases, you can use a current job or get connected to a new potential employer through your course of study. Ultimately, academic programs give you opportunities to apply the new skills and knowledge you gain right into the workplace.Ěý
Working through school can be hard, and it will demand a lot of you. But a steady job and a college education can coexist, and it might just make you a better student in the process.

]]>