February 23, 2012

The "Check Card": Better Than Paper

While your parents were probably decorating their checkbook covers and ordering specially designed checks with their family names on them, you have something even simpler and easier:

The “check card.” It’s such a beautiful thing.

An example of a cheque. 

Image via Wikipedia

Let’s take you back a bit on the concept of personal banking and finance. You have the checkbook. Lovely thing. It’s a little black, leather-bound book with strips of paper in it. Those strips of paper are called ‘checks.’ You use them to actually pay for things. What you do is write the name of the person you’re buying from, write the amount you’re using to buy, and sign your name at the bottom. Simple, right?

The only problem with them is that it’s easy to screw people over! Bad checks here, bad checks there. To make it even worse — blank checks! Never, ever, ever sign a blank check, because if anyone ever gets a hold of it, they can write it for as much money as they like, pass it off as their own, and — guess what — your bank account is flat empty.

This is actually why writing a check takes so long and is such a horrible hassle. You need an I.D., proof of insurance, an essay paper from when you were in college, your left shoe. Basically everything.

In this digital age of technology, the “check card” solves all those hassles with one swipe of the card. It’s also commonly known as a ‘debit card.’ You can use it anywhere — you can even run it as ‘credit,’ allowing you the ability to build a financial reputation (credit score) that can make it easier for you to buy such things like a house, or a car, or a boat. You don’t need to fill any papers out. All you need to do…is swipe it!

How’s that for convenience? Be positive, though, of one thing: don’t over-use the card. It’s a definite super-power and must be respected in the financial world.

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The Benefit of Financial Aid

Give your mom and pops a rest, will you? They spend enough money as it is. Here’s the deal: you’re heading into college, you’ve got your own dorm room, you have your classes all set up, and — Lord, have mercy — tuition and all the other costs, well, let’s just say it would kill any wallet!

A typical Reserve male dorm room 

Image via Wikipedia

So what do you do? Definitely don’t expect your parents to pay all of it. That would be insane. That is, of course, if your parents don’t have a fund set up for your college!

You have a saving grace in the dilemma of paying for your education: it’s called financial aid. Utilize it.

What you get with that is simply the ability to fund your college education with the use of what are called ‘direct loans.’ They’re from the government and are issued out to you almost without any effort. There’s a direct loan subsidized and a direct loan unsubsidized; the difference is the latter requires interest and no proof of financial need, and the former requires no interest but absolutely demands that there is proof of financial need. The official name of this benefit is the Stafford Loan, and it is definitely your best friend in college.

That’s not all you’ve got with financial aid. There are also grants, specifically the Pell Grant, a small amount of money that goes to your tuition costs. The best part about the grant is this: you don’t need to pay it back! In addition, scholarships are available but take a great deal of time and dedication to earn them — such as sports scholarships, academic scholarships, and many other kinds. For most, you need to write an essay or paper, proving that you’re suitable for the award. You also don’t need to pay these scholarships back.

Don’t be surprised if you actually get money while in college! Because the benefit is so huge. With it, you can definitely save your parents the death of their wallets, and the future of your education.

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