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 EDUCATION 
CENTERRESOURCE DIRECTORY
 
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SCHOOLS EARN 
YOUR DEGREE FROM HOME! |  
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Student Loans 
- 
 How 
to apply for a student loan (FAFSA)
 How to repay student 
loans
 How to have one low monthly school loan payment
 Defaulting on a student loan
 Repayment 
Plans
 
 
 
 North 
Country Community Colleges & University Directory 
 Clarkson 
University
 Clinton County Community College
 Jefferson Community College
 North Country 
College of Essex and Franklin
 Paul Smiths College
 St. Lawrence University
 SUNY Canton
 SUNY Plattsburgh
 The State University 
at Potsdam
 
 Clarkson 
              University 8 Clarkson Ave., Potsdam, New York 13699
 315-268-6400. 800-527-6577
 
 Clarkson ranks among the finest universities 
in the nation, according to such diverse measures as U.S. News and World Report, 
the Association for Independent Technological Universities, and corporate recruiters. 
Clarkson focuses on providing a rigorous professional experience, real-world experiences 
for a real-world education, and developing a collaborative community for students, 
faculty, and staff. website: http://www.clarkson.edu/
 
 Adirondack 
Community College
 640 Bay Road Queensbury, NY 12804
 ph: 518.743.2200
 As part of the State University of New York, Adirondack 
Community College (ACC) is a two-year college accredited by the Middle States 
Association of Colleges and Schools. ACC offers extensive Associate degrees and 
Certificate programs and practices transfer agreements with numerous Colleges 
and Universities.
 
 
 
 St. 
Lawrence University
 23 Romoda Drive · Canton, NY · 13617 
· 800-285-1856
 In an ideal location, St. Lawrence is a diverse liberal arts 
learning community of inspiring faculty, serious students, accomplished graduates 
guided by tradition and focused on the future.It is our expectation that students 
at St. Lawrence University engage in the process of academic planning over their 
academic career in order to best achieve their academic goals and reach their 
full potential. website: http://www.stlawu.edu/
 
 North 
Country College of Essex and Franklin
 23 Santanoni Ave., P.O.Box 89, Saranac Lake, NY 12983-0089 Phone: 518-891-2915
 Toll Free: 1-888-879-6222
 North Country Community College is committed to 
providing, within Essex and Franklin counties, an innovative, challenging, supportive 
environment where the intellectual, career, personal and creative aspirations 
of all interested individuals can be realized. website: http://www.nccc.edu/
 
 
 SUNY 
              Canton 34 
Cornell Drive · Canton, NY 13617 315.386.7011 1.800.388.7123
 The State University 
of New York at Canton is a public, coeducational, residential college located 
on a spacious campus along the banks of the Grasse River. Its northern location 
places SUNY Canton close to the Adirondack Mountains, the St. Lawrence River, 
and major Canadian cities such as Ottawa and Montreal. website:http://www.canton.edu/
 
 
 Herkimer County 
Community College
 Reservoir Road . Herkimer, New York 13350-1598
 Phone-315-866-0300
 Overlooking a small village in Upstate New York, HCCC is a two-year unit of the 
State University of New York, the nation’s largest comprehensive system of public 
higher education. A two-year degree from Herkimer prepares students for jobs or 
to continue their education at a four-year school.
 
 
 
 The 
              State University of New York at Potsdam
 44 Pierrepont Avenue, Potsdam NY 13676, (315) 267-2000
 SUNY Potsdam, located 
in beautiful northern New York, is a small liberal arts college providing an education 
that is driven by quality delivered in a way that is uniquely personal. We are 
one of 64 units of the State University of New York and one of 13 SUNY Arts and 
Science Colleges. SUNY Potsdam offers bachelor's and master's degrees in several 
areas of liberal studies, music and teacher education. website:http://www.potsdam.edu/
 
 Jefferson 
              Community College
 1220 Coffeen Street, Watertown, NY 13601 (315) 786-2200
 Jefferson Community 
College (JCC) is a participating eArmyU college. JCC is one of the 30 community 
colleges in the 64-campus system of the State University of New York (SUNY). A 
two-year public institution supervised by SUNY and sponsored by Jefferson County, 
the College offers both transfer and career programs leading to the associate 
degree or certificate. website:http://www.sunyjefferson.edu/
 
 
 SUNY 
              Plattsburgh101 Broad Street Plattsburgh, New York 12901.
 Phone: (518) 564-2000Plattsburgh 
State's remarkable campus culture and environment combine with an exceptionally 
high quality of teaching to produce success for students. 
The Plattsburgh experience 
challenges students to discover their potential, to seek new intellectual horizons, 
and to learn skills that can turn dreams into realities. It's an experience that 
calls students to explore new ground and reach still greater heights of achievement.website:http://www.plattsburgh.edu/
 
 Clinton 
Community College
 136 
Clinton Point Drive Plattsburgh, NY 12901
 Clinton 
Community College, a member unit of the State University of New York, is situated 
at Bluff Point, approximately 4 miles south of Plattsburgh, on forested heights 
overlooking Lake Champlain. While the college features the modern equipment and 
facilities necessary for contemporary educational needs, its distinctive architecture 
and spectacular natural setting hint at significant times of the past. In fact, 
the Bluff Point locale has been the scene of some of the most important events 
in the founding of the American Republic and its tradition. It is fitting that 
an area so magnificently beautiful and so much a part of the early development 
of the United States is maintained for public use and enjoyment.website: 
http://www.clinton.edu/
 
 Paul 
              Smith's College
 Route 
86 & 30 P.O. Box 265 Paul Smiths, NY 12970-0265 Tel: 518-327-6227 1-800-421-2605
 Paul Smith's College is set in the Adirondacks of Northern New York amid awe-inspiring 
mountains, sparkling lakes and lush forests. The main campus of the 14,200 acre 
property is on the shores of Lower St. Regis Lake, providing a safe, comfortable 
and invigorating environment to obtain baccalaureate or associate degrees. Bachelor’s 
programs include Biology, Business, Culinary Arts and Service Management, Fisheries 
and Wildlife Sciences, Forestry, Hotel, Resort and Tourism Management, Natural 
Resources, and Recreation, Adventure Travel and Ecotourism (RATE). Alternatively, 
careers also start with Associate degrees in programs such as Business, Culinary 
Arts, Forest Recreation or Forest Technician, Liberal Arts, Hotel and Restaurant 
Management, Outdoor Recreation, Surveying, or Urban Tree Management. 
website:http://www.paulsmiths.edu/
 Repaying your 
student loans
 
 What 
you need to know about repaying student loans...
 After you graduate, leave 
school, or drop below half-time enrollment, you have a period of time before you 
have to begin repayment. This “grace period” will be six months for a Federal 
(FFEL) or Direct Stafford Loan. nine months for Federal Perkins Loans (If you’re 
a parent reading this and you have a FFEL or Direct PLUS Loan, you don’t have 
a grace period—repayment generally must begin within 60 days after the loan is 
fully disbursed.)
 
  If 
you’ve attended college or received other education beyond high school, and you 
received federal student loans from the US Department of Education (ED) along 
the way - You’re now about to deal with paying them back. You’ll need to know 
how to manage your student loan debt to avoid repayment problems.
 There are 
several available repayment options so you can successfully repay your debt. Federal 
student loans are real loans, just like car loans or mortgage loans. You can’t 
just get out of repaying a student loan if your financial circumstances become 
difficult, unless you qualify for bankruptcy. But, it’s very difficult to have 
federal student loans discharged in bankruptcy; this happens only rarely. Also, 
you can’t cancel your student loans if you didn’t get the education you expected, 
didn’t get the job you expected, or didn’t complete your education, unless you 
leave school for a reason that qualifies you for a discharge of your loan - Remember, 
your student loans belong to you; you have to pay them back.
 
 Loan 
Consolidation
 
 A 
Consolidation Loan allows you to combine all the federal student loans you received 
to finance your college education into a single loan.
 New Provisions Permitting 
Borrowers to Enter Repayment Early Under the Higher Education Act of 1965, as 
amended and the Department's regulations, a borrower can request a repayment schedule 
that provides for repayment to commence at a date that is earlier than six months 
after the date the borrower ceases to carry at least one-half the normal full 
time academic workload.
 If the lender grants the request, the loan enters 
the repayment period and the borrower waives any applicable grace period. This 
is the case even if the borrower is currently enrolled in school. Such a borrower 
will be eligible to obtain a consolidation loan to repay the loan on which early 
conversion to repayment was granted, assuming all other eligibility criteria are 
met. As stated above, the borrower waives any applicable grace period, now and 
in the future.
 
  
To apply for a Direct Loan Consolidation or an FFEL Consolidation the borrower 
must contact the lender and complete an application. Most lenders provide borrowers 
with the ability to apply on-line or request an application over the telephone. 
Once an application is completed and submitted, the lender will request information 
from the borrower’s other lenders or from its own system to determine the amounts 
outstanding on the borrowers loans. The borrower will then receive notification 
about the consolidation loan, normal consumer disclosures, the amount owed, and 
if appropriate, where to make payments.
 
 Consolidation 
loans have fixed interest rates that are based on the weighted average of the 
interest rates on the loans being consolidated. A lender can provide a new consolidation 
loan borrower with the lowest statutory weighted average interest rate for loans 
by using the lower of the weighted average of the interest rates on the loans 
being consolidated as of July 1 or the date the lender received the borrower's 
consolidation loan application. The lender should apply a consistent method of 
determining when an application is received.
 
 
 Lenders' 
Options for Determining Federal Consolidation Loan Interest Rates and Permitting 
Borrowers to Enter Repayment Early
 If the lender determines 
that the borrower is still enrolled, the lender can put the loan that will now 
be in repayment, into an in-school deferment status at the borrower's request. 
The interest rate on the loan would be the deferment rate. If the borrower consolidates 
the Stafford Loan, the deferment interest rate should be used in calculating the 
weighted average interest rate on the consolidation loan.
 
 
 Repayment Plans
 
 When 
repaying your student loan, you have some choices in repayment plans (for FFEL 
and Direct Loans) that can make repaying easier and help you avoid delinquency 
or default. If you’re delinquent, it means you’re late making a scheduled loan 
payment (most often, you’re 30 days or more late). Default, explained in more 
detail (see default page), generally means you’re 270 days or more late in making 
a loan payment. (Note that for Federal Perkins Loans, however, default is defined 
as the failure to make an installment payment when due or the failure to comply 
with other terms of your promissory note or written repayment agreement.)
 Although default is more serious than delinquency, even delinquency can be reported 
to credit bureaus. A delinquency notation remains part of your financial history 
and could affect your credit rating. Repaying your loan on time will help you 
establish and maintain a good credit rating, which is crucial when you want to 
buy a car or a house, or even if you want to rent an apartment. Sometimes, your 
credit rating can even affect whether you’ll be selected for a particular job. 
It’s important to keep paying on your student loans!
 
 Defaulting on your 
Student Loans
 
 If 
you default, it means you failed to make payments on your student loan according 
to the terms of your promissory note, the binding legal document you signed at 
the time you took out your loan. In other words, you failed to make your loan 
payments as scheduled. Your school, the financial institution that made or owns 
your loan, your loan guarantor, and the federal government all can take action 
to recover the money you owe. Here are some consequences of default:
 National 
credit bureaus can be notified of your default, which will harm your credit rating, 
making it hard to buy a car or a house.
 You would be ineligible for additional 
federal student aid if you decided to return to school.
 Loan payments can 
be deducted from your paycheck.
 State and federal income tax refunds can 
be withheld and applied toward the amount you owe.
 You will have to pay late 
fees and collection costs on top of what you already owe.
 You can be sued.
   How to Apply for a Student Loan
 U.S. Department of Education 
- FAFSA
 Gather 
the documents you need
 Start with your Social Security Number, driver's license, 
income tax return, bank statements and investment records.
 
 Print a FAFSA 
on the Web Worksheet
 Write in your answers and gather your parent's information 
then transfer the data to FAFSA on the Web.
 
 Plan how to sign your FAFSA
 Sign electronically with a U.S. Department of Education Personal Identification 
Number (PIN) or by mailing in a signature page.
 
 Apply for a PIN now!
 Speed up the process by signing your FAFSA electronically with your PIN. 
Your parent can sign electronically too.
 
 Check your eligibility for federal 
student aid.
 
 Note important deadlines
 To 
meet the Federal Student Financial Aid deadline:  Apply 
as early as possible beginning January 1st of each year. Schools and states 
have their own deadlines. Contact them for exact deadline dates.
 
 
    | College 
loans bear biggest part
 of budget-cutting plan
  
 |   | WASHINGTON 
(AP) -- As Congress moves to slash $40 billion in spending, no program will take 
a bigger hit than college loans, where almost $13 billion would be cut over five 
years.
 For 
students, the upshot is mixed. Excessive government payments to banks would be 
halted, freeing up some dollars for new grants, larger loan limits and reduced 
loan fees. But 
overall, the student loan program would endure the largest cut in its history, 
and most of the money would not be pumped back into education. Instead, under 
a plan the House approved Monday, the money would be counted only toward reducing 
the federal deficit. "At 
a time when the entire country believes we need to make higher education more 
affordable, Congress is trying to balance the budget on the backs of students," 
said Jasmine Harris, legislative director for the United States Student Association.
 School 
                    Loan Consolidation
 Reduce 
your monthly payments by up to 58%. 
There's no credit check or fees.
 click 
here
 Parents 
who take out loans on behalf of their students would pay higher interest rates. 
And other parts of the college package could indirectly drive up costs for students, 
if banks pass on new expenses or offer less attractive loans as their profit margin 
shrinks. "You 
don't want to say the news is all bad. It's a decidedly mixed bag," said Terry 
Hartle, senior vice president of the American Council on Education, the largest 
coalition of colleges and higher education groups in the nation. "But 
on balance, one comes to the conclusion that this is a sad step in the history 
of the student loan program," Hartle said. The 
$12.7 billion in college cuts are part of an effort, led by conservative Republican 
lawmakers, to show discipline with the public's money. But Democrats say GOP leaders 
only want to pay for tax cuts, all the while eroding the ability of parents to 
pay for college. The 
timing of Senate action was unclear. Colleges and university associations scrambled 
Monday, urging the Senate to reject the bill as the Congress tried to end its 
2005 work. Within 
higher education, the single biggest cut appears to be in the profits of lenders. Under 
current law, banks get to keep the excess money when the amounts that students 
pay in interest exceed the rate of return that the government has guaranteed. 
That would end. Lenders would have to refund the difference to the government, 
meaning billions of dollars. "We 
were able to reduce spending through changes in the way lenders operate," said 
Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., the chairman of the Senate education committee. "But at the 
same time, we shielded the direct impact to students, and actually increased student 
opportunities."
 School 
                    Loan Consolidation
 Reduce 
your monthly payments by up to 58%. 
There's no credit check or fees.
 click 
here
 The 
interest rate for parent loans would increase to a fixed rate of 8.5 percent in 
July. It is now a variable rate and had been set to move to a fixed rate of 7.9 
percent. Meanwhile, 
the interest on students loans would also move to a fixed rate of 6.8 percent 
in July, up from its current variable rate of 4.7 percent. But that change was 
already set to happen under law, and the deficit-reduction bill does not alter 
that plan. Student groups tend to support a fixed rate as a protection against 
unstable, rising interest rates. Loan 
limits would increase from $2,625 to $3,500 for first-year students, and from 
$3,500 to $4,500 for second-year students. The total borrowing limit allowed for 
undergraduates would remain at $23,000. Lawmakers aimed for a compromise of letting 
students borrow more at the start of college, reflecting current needs, without 
sanctioning a bigger overall debt. The 
bill would offer grants to poorer, high-achieving students in the first two years 
of college and older undergraduates studying math, science or high-demand foreign 
languages. John 
Boehner, R-Ohio, the chairman of the House education committee, said the bill 
"offers significant new benefits to students pursuing a college education." But 
critics said the size of those benefits doesn't come close to offsetting the cuts. Said 
Bob Shireman, director of The Institute for College Access and Success: "Overall, 
there will be less money out there for helping students pay for higher education. 
And it's not being returned to the system, except in some small ways."
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 Phone: 518-891-3745    
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 E-Mail: RobGrant@northnet.org
 
       
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