Blue Gills, Bass and Scholarships-No Joke
There are two kinds of fishing families and two kinds of
families wanting college scholarships. And, there are amazing
similarities between them. Weekend fishing families do not spend
time researching opportunities. They grab the kids, jump into
the car, and race to the nearest bait shop. "Where is a good
place to take the kids? Are the fish biting? Thanks! We'll take
three dozen worms, please." Then, they head for the lake. They
catch a few bluegills, have a picnic and go home. The weekend
scholarship family's search habits are sporadic. They spend no
time thinking about scholarship possibilities until the junior
or senior year. They believe their family income may be too
high. They're convinced that their student's GPA may be a little
on the low side. "We don't believe that a C+ or B- is good
enough to win." They have never contacted the guidance office
about scholarship opportunities, and they are ready to settle
for government-backed loans. "Loan-aid" can run from $50,000 to
a $100,000 and more! Who needs it? This haphazard scholarships
family falls for two major fallacies: Students of families with
lower incomes get the scholarships. Yes, 80% of all scholarships
are given to students who have a financial need, but almost 20%
go to students on a meritorious or otherwise basis. Another
falsehood: Only "A" students get the bucks. Again, many winners
have "A" GPA's. But, winners also have GPA's ranging from C to
B+. And the federal government has sponsored some in the "D"
category. Since the scholarship pie totals billions of dollars,
there is enough money for those who prepare and apply for it.
The planning fishing family knows where the fish are. They
discover a lake that produces big bass. They wait for the right
weather. The boat is gassed up. The fish locator is working
properly. They have a variety of baits. And one morning, a car,
boat and trailer can be seen pulling out of the driveway. That
lake is their destination. The boat trolls the edges of the lake
catching many good-sized bass. This family finishes early before
it gets too hot. They conducted research and were rewarded for
their efforts. The serious scholarship family starts early,
finds sources and notifies the guidance office. Perhaps your
family has college-bound students. Will you be like the family
who didn't care about what happened, expecting small results
with fish and scholarships, or will you be like the family who
planned their outing and scholarship searches and experienced
huge financial success? Will you settle for bluegills and accept
loans or fish for bass and plan for scholarship gold? Always
remember, the scholarship effort is truly a family affair. My
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