College Saving Tips – LESS is MORE!



Dearest Readers,
As of today, I’m competing in an “Education and Wealth” blog competition on GoBankingRates.com and it would be really wonderful if I could win so…do me a huge favor and VOTE FOR ME, PLEEEASE! All you have to do is go to the site and comment with my article #: “19″. That’s IT! SO easy. You should also check out the other articles, they’re pretty good. :) Below is the article I submitted which I think is a decent read for anyone in school (undergrad, grad, or other). Thanks for your support!!!:

For many, it’s that time of year again – time to head back to school! After sharing my own college credit card debt disaster story, a reader asked me what I would have done differently back in college.

Courtesy of cbc.ca

I decided to make my response into a whole new post so here are my top money saving tips [in no particular order] for higher education budgeting (those I followed and those I wish I’d followed!). Comment with any other tips that I missed!:

1) This first one is pretty obvious, but…apply for as much financial aid, grants, and scholarships as humanly possible. FAFSA and www.fastweb.com are the best sites to start with. Every little bit helps and it costs nothing to apply (except your time, but that’s irrelevant :) ).

2) (if you can help it) DO NOT BUY BOOKS NEW! Get them used or BORROW them whenever possible. The college text book market is one of the biggest rip off scams known to man (right up there with infamous infomercials). Chances are you’ll probably only spend about 5 hours of your entire life with any of your text books – so why spend $300 on each! There are plenty of online markets for trading and bartering for college text books, amazon and google are your friends.

3) To be a true college student, use Megabus, Bolt Bus, or Chinatown bus service whenever possible! Amtrak is just not worth the money when you can use much cheaper means for much better savings.

4) You’ll be surrounded by fellow peers spending (their parents’) money all around you. Don’t try to keep up with the Joneses! It’s not worth it – trust! Keep it cheap – shop at forever21, H&M, other less costly stores (and don’t sleep on Target). Because let’s face it – out of everything I bought during college, I probably only know where 5% of those clothes are today – stuffed in some storage bin in my closet!

5) If you can be an RA and live “room and board”-free – DO IT! I never took advantage of this (too busy being a bad example by having parties in my own dorm room), but if you decide to be a Resident Advisor for your dorm, this can save a lot of college housing costs during your latter years of college. Good deal if you ask me…
Continue reading College Saving Tips – LESS is MORE!

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Money Management for Teens and Parents



Good morning, Readers.  The topic of today’s article is not necessarily geared to my traditional Dolla Thug audience of 20-somethings, but we can all learn these lessons early before we’re parents ourselves (and if you are already a parent, then this article should be of even more value now!).  I want to introduce you to our first guest author, M. Smith.  M. Smith is a financial article writer.  She has worked as a financial consultant and has had many articles published on various finance sites; her areas of expertise include debt settlement, debt consolidation, debt relief, refinancing, reverse mortgage, credit repair and so on.

Courtesy of www.allmandandlee.com

THE DREADED REUNION
Have you recently been to your high school or college reunion?  You must have had a nostalgic and fabulous experience.  One of the benefits of attending a school reunion is that there is no underhanded advantage in attending it!  You need not pretend how young you are or where you started your life.  Your classmates already have that information.  The relative advantage is that if you have a diverse class of 500 classmates, then you get to learn from the various wide-ranging experiences and subsequent financial experiences of your classmates.
Continue reading Money Management for Teens and Parents

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.