mSanchez611
Member
I don't think you understand. I had already paid for my classes, but I guess saying that I had "paid for my meal" was too vague. I'm not trying to get freebie shit. I used the money I got from the scholarship to pay for housing (off campus, btw). I accepted the scholarship because I didn't want to take further loans out to do so. If I had known that that's how the scholarship was going to be treated, I would have taken the loans anyway, so at least I could have done it by my own terms.That applies to grants as well and scholarships if the entity providing the funds puts such rules on their money, which they apparently did in this situation.
Seriously, don’t you have the maturity to take responsibility for knowing what money you are due and not enrolling in classes if you believe you don’t have the money available?
The scholarship program doesn’t have a right to say the student is or isn’t liable for a debt to the school. That is between you and the school.
And if you want to argue conract issues;
You registered for and attended classes. That makes you liable for payment for the classes. The school applied for, on your behalf, scholarship money. Since it was denied, that leaves you owing the money.
And I’m pretty confident in saying that yes, you did acknowledge financial liability for the classes. That is pretty standard language in a schools application.
And like I said; contact the school and ask if they will nullify the affected classes and rescind the degree in exchange for cancelling the debt. That will take care of the debt, if they accept the offer.
I suspect you want to be excused from the debt as well as retaining your degree. That would be inequitable.
Also, the school wasn't denied the money, (why would it give it to me if it was denied?) That's the whole point and problem. It was given the money it applied for, without my consent or notification, so then they had to pay it back. Now they want me to pay them back, even though I never asked for the scholarship. I accepted it because it was a scholarship, aka, I don't have to pay it back, and because nowhere in the application form I filled out to received the scholarship, nor in its regulations, did it ever say I had to pay it back. If that's a thing, then I believe it should be included in the form in the fine print. Without such warnings, it's basically a trap/disaster waiting to happen.
And are you that pampered and privileged that you think only those with money can attend college? America is up to its eyeballs in student loan debt because basically no one can afford college anymore. I did pay for my classes. I only got the Hope scholarship for one year out of the three that I went. So it's not like I was wringing the school out for as much free money as I could get. I paid out of pocket for the vast majority of it, and I did so by working various jobs the whole three years that I went.
But I get it. I'm ignorant about the law but feel I've been wronged, so I was looking for help, but this obviously not the place for it. Instead, without any empathy, you'd rather fight me about the issue instead of giving any sort of helpful insight into the law and make assumptions about my situation instead of asking questions for clarification. Don't bother replying; I won't be visiting this site again.