Student loans are both a blessing and a curse to college students all across the country. On one hand, student loans allow you to have the money you need in many cases to attend college at all. On the other hand, most college students, particularly those entering college for the first time have inflated opinions of their starting salaries upon graduation and the bills they will face while living in the real world.
In fact, most freshmen college students have no real concept of the limits of money in which to base their decisions as to whether or not they can realistically expect to repay those funds once they've graduated college.
The sad truth is that
many college graduates find that for the first 10-15 years after they have
graduated college, they are essentially indentured servants to their student
loan debts. There are many reasons for this and different college graduates
will find different things about their student loans when the appropriate time
comes.
First of all, those
taking out student loans need to understand that a college degree does not
guarantee a high starting salary. Beyond that, a college degree is no guarantee
that there will be employers lining up to take your name and number upon
graduation. The truth is that most college grads take anywhere from 6 months to
a year to find a job in their fields and even then the starting salaries are
often far less than anticipated.
Part of the blame for
over-inflated expectations is the fault of universities attempting to validate
their high tuition rates by displaying average starting salaries of only those
that have successful offers in the field of study immediately upon graduation
(which usually indicates a history of working with the company or another
company as an intern prior to being hired) and not those students who have no
prior work experience in their chosen fields.
Part of the expectations
is students reading job advertisements for experienced workers in a field and
assuming that an education will provide the experience that employers require.
Regardless of the reason, most starting salary expectations are not realistic
in light of the current market.
The problem is that for
many students a student loan is the difference in receiving a college education
or not receiving one. For these students, there is no option. The price they
will pay (with interest) for having student loans in order to get through the
educational process will repay itself over the course of a lifetime if they are
wise about making the necessary payments and stay on top of things such as
consolidation loans and making payments on time.
Student loans are a
great tool for those who have no other options when it comes to attending and
affording to attend a university. On the other hand, for those who do not
have an absolute need for the funds a student loan can provide they can prove
to be problematic when trying to establish your career and your lifestyle upon
graduation. This is a tool for education that should be used sparingly at best.
Whether or not you choose
to take out student loans in order to fund your college education it is a good
idea if you exhaust all other available resources first. Check out your options
for grants, scholarships, and work-study programs before leaping into student
loans to pay for your education.
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