Making a way
Posted: August 9th, 2010 | No Comments | Tags: College Access, Financial Aid, Scholarships, The Root
While this site (The Root) and article (from United Negro College Fund president Michael Lomax) speak specifically to students of color, the underlying advice here is universal, and offers key insights into what I cover in Strategy 9 of Higher Learning, “Manage Your Money.”
The key line in the article for me is “too few students of color and their families prepare plans to pay for college.” And the key words in that line are FAMILIES and PLANS.
For many of this coming year’s freshman class, parents had a 529 account set up for them before they were holding their own milk bottles. Parents had a broad understanding of the college application and financial process, because they had gone through it themselves, along with most of their friends and social network. College wasn’t a mystery to them, but a part of who they were and what they did daily.
Many first generation college students do not have the luxury of spending 18 years preparing for college, with the collective support of parents, extended family members, and a network of family friends with undergraduate and professional degrees. That may be the reality, but that can’t be the end of the story. A lot of people get a late start on the things that they really want to do. What separates the ones who are successful from the ones who do not finish is a commitment to completion. Rather than convince yourself that maybe college isn’t for you because you got a late start, don’t think you can afford it, or don’t know much about how to go, do everything that you can do to get as much information as possible, make connections, and develop your own plan. Everything that you need is out there waiting for you. Start reading, ask questions (counselors, college access programs, teachers, employers, mentors, and others), then keep researching and reading some more. While it’s best to start seriously thinking about this stuff as a family as early as possible, it’s never too late, even if you’re already out of high school. If you want it, there’s always a way – put together your support network, get the information you need, then execute your game plan!

