Student loans can be obtained through FAFSA at www.fafsa.com, local banks, or through your schools financial aid office. These are the three best places to check.
One must first complete the Student Aid application for the school one would like to attend when applying for a student loan from EdFinancial Services. One can apply online or get the form from their high school or the college they would like to attend.
Probably nothing PROVIDED you pay back the loan. It depends upon whether it was a condition of the loan that you DO go to school. In any event, whether or not you go to school, by its very nature it is a student LOAN and not a student GIFT so you must expect to repay it - one way or another. By its very name it is a student LOAN and not a student GIFT. So whether or not you actrually go to school you will have to repay it. What ELSE did you imagine?
It is student loan provided to a student in college. When you apply for finial aid you can also apply for a student loan then, your college will have lender set up.
A student in Canada would need to apply through a student loan company. There are some available out there willing to help any student with their student loan applications.
With a little research one can find several websites that do student loan comparisons. Some sites are school specific, so one can check with student services for the web link. Overture Student Loan Marketplace, ElmSelect and Graduate Leverage are a few sites one can start with.
The main place that i would suggest to go for to apply for a federal student loan would be your local bank branch. Go there and speak to one of the advisors about the best loan that would be suited for you.
Yes.
One can have a student loan forgiven if one has no money at all to pay or if one joins a program called student loan which basically pays every penny of ones loan.
The U.S. Army provides a Student Loan Repayment Program. One can join the Army as well as go to school. While attending school the individuals loans get paid for. However, one must be in the military. Also, if one becomes a teacher one can work at a Title One school for a minimum of five years while paying small loan fees. After those five years one will have complete loan forgiveness.
Don't think he would roll the loan over...he does need to notify the lender that he will be going back to school so his loan can be put into deferrment for then of his education. Once he is out of school I do believe that he would be able to consolidate the loan and just have 1 payment and it helps if they are from the same lending facility to make the process alot easier.
Yes.
Yes, an employer can cosign for a student loan. Any one can cosign for a student loan if they meet the requirements.