Federal Aid for Online Learning Programs Colorado Springs CO

Most adult students tackle this problem by balancing a job, a family, and personal obligations with part-time college classes funded wholly or in part with federal student aid. And thanks to computer technology and changing regulations, many of them are able to attend classes via the Internet without ever having to leave the house.

Checkmate Payday Loans
(719) 219-3592
1015 Garden of The Gods RD
Colorado Springs, CO
EZ Money Payday Loans
(719) 576-8442
1995 B St
Colorado Springs, CO
FIRST COMMERCIAL BANK
303706-1723
10457 Park Meadows Drive
Lone Tree, CO
COLORADO STATE BANK & TRUST-AURORA
303693-1000
15490 East Hampden
Aurora, CO
Colorado East Bank & Trust
(719) 584-2000
1515 Fortino Blvd.
Pueblo, CO
Checkmate Payday Loans
(719) 219-3624
5746 Palmer Park Blvd
Colorado Springs, CO
Colorado Mountain Bank
(719) 382-5643
410 S. Santa Fe Avenue
Fountain, CO
CHASE BANK - YOSEMITE, ENGLEWOOD
303244-5260
4968 S Yosemite St
Englewood, CO
COLORADO BUSINESS BANK DENVER TECH CENTER
720264-5631
8400 E. Prentice, #150
Englewood, CO
Woodrow Wilson Academy
(303) 431-3694
8300 W. 94th Ave.
Westminster, CO

Federal Aid for Online Learning Programs

Federal Aid for Online Learning Programs

Pursuing a certificate or degree can cost a lot of money, but it's usually money well spent. On average, people with undergraduate and graduate degrees make more money than those without them. However, if a college diploma passed you by while life took over, getting back into school may seem like an insurmountable task — especially when you consider the costs involved. 

How do you do it? Most adult students tackle this problem by balancing a job, a family, and personal obligations with part-time college classes funded wholly or in part with federal student aid. And thanks to computer technology and changing regulations, many of them are able to attend classes via the Internet without ever having to leave the house.

Federal financial aid
Even as an online student, most of your financial aid will probably come from the federal government in the form of need-based aid such as grants, work-study programs, and loans. You can access up-to-date information about federal financial aid programs at the U.S. Department of Education's Web site, www.studentaid.ed.gov , or by calling 800-4-FEDAID. You'll see that much of what is available to non-traditional students is similar, if not identical, to the resources available to traditional students heading off to college at the ripe old age of eighteen.

Are you eligible?

Author: Amy Ambler

2009 Peterson's, A Nelnet Company. All Rights Reserved

Click here to read more from Petersons