
Harold T
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that depends what kind of insurance you have if its in the policy or not |
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yLime
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I don't know of any insurance that covers tuition. Unless your parent/grandparent passed away and left you money earmarked for college or you have a term life policy that is maturing at 18. Scholarships and loans are the only ways (besides you paying) I know of to pay tuition. |
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nsarge1
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you pay for it no insurance |
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Guelph
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If you show high academic potential (good grades, recommendations from teachers, high SAT scores, well written application and essay) you may qualify for financial aid from the university, government or private charities. If you're in high school, you can ask your advisor on how to apply for these things. |
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Smiley
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Tuition is for school, you pay or get scholarships. Insurance has nothing to do with it. |
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thedavecorp
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Okay, here are your options:
Contact the school and work out if this is still the case:
Working full-time gets you free classes.
Teaching a class there gets you free classes.
Also there are the classic routes:
Scholarships - go to both the financial aid office AND the DEAN, the Deans know how to hook you up - especially honors college - those get special scholarships.
Loans
Begging the parents
Working
and yes - out of pocket.
Hope your SATs are good. - at least a thousand, 1200 brings in real money, at 1400 you're set.
What insurance? |
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PJ
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Tuition for what? If it tuition for post secondary school, then yes, you will have to find a way to pay for it out of your own pocket if you do not qualify for financial aid (based on income of the applicant or the income of the applicant's parents) or scholarships (through school, etc.). |
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brains
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No, insurance doesn't pay tuition. You can apply for loans and/or grants to help pay for tuition. Talk to a bank or the financial aid office at the school of your choice. |
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PuterPrsn
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Assuming you're talking about tuition for school, you pay it out of your pocket. If you have great grades, you can sometimes get a scholarship, or if your family is very, very poor you can sometimes get a grant. |
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parsonsel
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I always had to pay for tuition. Insurance is for illness and/or accidents. |
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csucdartgirl
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You pay for it. Whether it's your own cash, borrowed cash, scholarship cash, grant cash, or you have to work in exchange for it (resident assistant in the dorm). |
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jyd9999
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for what? |
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psoeffing
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Do you mean insurance itself or the PROCEEDS from an insurance policy? |
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B
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Well you can apply for financial aid, by going to FASFA's website (http://www.fafsa.ed.gov/). If you get accepted, they will pay for quite a bit of it, but you will have to pay that back. If you do not get accepted or if you need more money for school, you can go to any bank and ask if they have student loans that you can apply for. That is the best way to do it. Good Luck. |
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