Domingo con el Objectivo de Estudios Postsecundarios
8 de febrero, 2009
2:00 - 4:00 PM
30+ Lugares en todo Arizona
Ocho sitios de sábado solamente
Obtén tu boleto al futuro
La Comisión de Educación Postsecundaria de Arizona se complace en presentar el 13o Domingo anual con el Objetivo de Estudios Postsecundarios - el primer paso para encontrar dinero para el colegio universitario o la universidad.
Domingo con el Objetivo de Estudios Postsecundarios es un evento GRATIS diseñado para ayudar a los estudiantes de Arizona que van a ir a los colegios universitarios o a las universidades y a sus familias con el proceso de solicitud de ayuda financiera. Visita uno de los 30 lugares en todo el estado donde expertos en ayuda financiera de la Asociación de Administradores de Ayuda Financiera de Arizona te ayudarán a completar la Solicitud Gratis para Ayuda Federal a Estudiantes (cuyas siglas en inglés son FAFSA).
Si usted está interesado/a en llenar un formulario de FAFSA en el Domingo con el Objetivo de Estudios Postsecundarios, esta es una lista de lo que usted debe traer:
- Si usted tiene 23 años de edad o menos, traiga a sus padres y la información de los ingresos de sus padres para el 2008
- Si usted tiene 24 años de edad o más, traiga los informes de sus ingresos del 2008.
La Asociación de Administradores de Ayuda Financiera de Arizona (cuyas siglas en inglés son AASFAA) es un socio de Domingo con el Objetivo de Estudios Postsecundarios. Entre los patrocinadores del evento están Fondos USA y la Fundación de Educación Lumina.
Josh Barreda made a decision during his senior year of high school that is paying big dividends now. He decided to forgo the Westwood High football team and instead use his time to apply for scholarships for college. Each day after lunch, Barreda went to the career center at the Mesa, Ariz., high school for an hour. “I dedicated an hour to applying for scholarships every day. I looked at it as a class,” he says. He worked on his personal statement, resume and references and received help from the counselors staffing the center. Many days an adviser would hand him a scholarship application and suggest he apply. He applied for 15 scholarships and received six. As a result of his hard work, he received enough financial aid to cover his costs at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff. A combination of scholarships, a federal Pell Grant and state merit-based aid are funding his tuition and living expenses. “If I didn’t have financial aid, I would not be going to college,” he says. “I’d be working in a restaurant, saving money and attending community college when I could. It definitely would have postponed my graduation by several years.” Barreda and his family moved to Arizona from California when he was in the 8th grade. His father had lost his job, and they came to the state to live with an aunt. Although his dad found work soon after arriving, with four children in the family, bills and rent, Barreda says there’s no money for college. He and his older sister share an apartment in Flagstaff, and both receive financial aid to attend NAU. Barreda is working toward a degree in hotel-and-restaurant management and hopes one day to open his own hotel and restaurant. A straight-A student in high school, Barreda says freshman year is going well so far. Does he think he made the right choice in high school? Absolutely. “Applying for scholarships instead of playing football definitely helped me in the long run,” he says. —Courtesy of USA Funds