When looking for a school– and thinking about how to pay for it– one helpful piece of information is this: how happy are students with financial aid? This means two things: (1) how happy are they with the actual financial aid package they receive, and how fair do they think this is, and (2) how happy are they with the human being at the school assigned to help students with the difficult task of finding money for school?
How can you find this information? For one thing, ask around. Talk to students and find out what they think of the financial aid system at their schools. For another, check out various college ranking systems to find the best and worse schools for financial aid.
According to The Princeton Review, these are the 10 schools where students are happiest with financial aid:
- Princeton
- Stanford
- Pomona College
- Harvard
- New College of Florida
- Thomas Aquinas College
- Beloit College
- College of the Atlantic
- Wabash College
- Claremont McKenna College
And, according to The Princeton Review, these are the 10 schools were students are most unhappy with financial aid:
- New York University
- Emerson College
- Penn State
- Rutgers
- University of Mary Washington
- Hampton University
- Amherst College
- University of Colorado
- Spelman College
- SUNY Purchase
My alma mater, Rutgers, is on this list, which is no surprise! The people in the financial aid office were scary mean, at least when I went there. It was a shock to me when I went to grad school and somebody in the financial aid office offered to help me with my financial aid materials. Imagine that!

March 10th, 2011 at 2:12 pm
[...] to get those applications completed and submit them for review. Every student requesting Federal financial aid must fill out a new FAFSA (free application for federal student aid) for every school year, and the [...]
June 22nd, 2010 at 1:22 am
[...] few days reading 100 appeals from students who want to attend Providence College, but need more financial aid in order to do so. Every application for more financial aid is a heart-breaking plea for more money [...]
June 22nd, 2010 at 1:02 am
[...] few days reading 100 appeals from students who want to attend Providence College, but need more financial aid in order to do so. Every application for more financial aid is a heart-breaking plea for more money [...]