Student loan | This student had his $32,000 <b>student loan</b> paid off by signing up for <b>...</b> |
This student had his $32,000 <b>student loan</b> paid off by signing up for <b>...</b> Posted: 18 Jul 2015 08:00 AM PDT GivlingIn 2012, Kevin Foster graduated from Manhattan Christian College with a bachelor's degree in cross-cultural studies. He also landed himself $32,000 in the hole with student-loan debt. The fact that Foster came out of school with tens of thousands of dollars of debt isn't a unique story by a long shot. College affordability has recently become the preeminent issue in higher education, as student-debt figures have hit staggering levels. One of Foster 's strategies for tackling his loans, however, was certainly novel. He signed up for an innovative, new pay-to-play online trivia game called Givling earlier this year with the hope that one of the company's promises — paying off some member's student debt — would apply to him. And eventually, it did. Givling showed up at Foster's door in June and told him the company paid of all $32,000 of his loans. "I started freaking out," he told Business Insider. Givling If you haven't heard of Givling, you're not alone. The startup launched in March but is just starting to make waves. Givling describes itself as "gamified crowdfunding." It works like this: People with student-loan debt can sign up for Givling in order to be placed in a queue based on the time and date of their registration to have their debts paid. But these students don't have to play any games on Givling to be eligible for loan repayment. Separately, trivia gamers sign up and are randomly placed into teams of three. Team members answer true or false questions to rack up points. The highest-scoring funding team is eligible for a $4 million prize. In addition to the large $4 million prize, there are smaller daily prize amounts awarded. Givling costs $0.50 to play a round and an additional $0.30 for a transaction fee. Players also receive one free game a day. Givling Foster signed up for Givling and was placed first in the queue but says he still didn't expect to benefit from the game. He continued on with his loan payments, contributing about $500 a month. To meet that obligation, he worked three jobs — at a kitchen at Manhattan Christian College, as a paraeducator in a special-education classroom for a local high school, and as server in a restaurant at Meadowlark Hills, a retirement home. Often his days were tiring, beginning at 5 a.m. and lasting until 7 p.m. Foster admitted that he was perpetually stressed when thinking about the mountain of debt he had taken on to achieve an education. And though he acknowledged that he loved his college experience — especially since he met his wife during it — he wasn't sure the cost was worth it. "Was 32,000 of debt worth life experience? Probably not," he concluded. Fortunately for him, Givling alleviated the monthly stress of paying off his student loans. In June, Givling surprised him at his home with news that his loans were completely paid off. "I looked down and there was the check behind him," Foster explained about the moment Givling showed up on his doorstep. "That's when I started freaking out." GivlingGivling was founded by Lizbeth Pratt, a Stanford graduate who was forced to declare bankruptcy following a business partnership that went awry. She was swindled out of money, and, though she won a court case, she was left with nothing, according to Pratt on Givling's site. "I was reading that Congress had passed a law forbidding student debt holders from declaring bankruptcy," Pratt explains on her website. "Donald Trump, I, gamblers, the manager that swindled me — we all declared bankruptcy. How could it be against the law for a student loan holder to declare bankruptcy, simply because he/she bought into the American dream of a college education?" Pratt is highlighting a point that loan experts make about the legal differences between student and other loans. Unlike consumer debt, it is extremely unlikely to have student-loan debt changed, even in cases of bankruptcy. Givling is excited about its role in addressing the student debt crisis. "The real goal is to fund as many loans as possible, Gayle Okumura Sullivan, the chief marketing officer of Givling, told Business Insider. As for Foster, he is now a pastor in Oklahoma where he runs a children's ministry and a youth group. And now that he no longer has the burden of large monthly student-loan payments, he has turned his sights to the future. Foster has taken two mission trips to the Philippines and plans to open an orphanage there focused on helping child victims of sex trafficking. Foster and his wife, however, know they aren't in the clear with student-loan payments yet. "She has about $10,000, so were working on that one right now," he said. |
Hillary Clinton wants to get rid of <b>student loans</b> to pay for public <b>...</b> Posted: 11 Aug 2015 12:37 AM PDT US presidential elections have a way of forcing much-needed policy discussions. And reforming the way we pay for college and tackling the $1.2 trillion student debt load is shaping up to be one of the most important issues in the 2016 race—particularly among the pivotal group of younger voters. On Monday (Aug. 10), Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton unveiled a proposal aimed at cutting college debt loads and allowing students to attend four-year public colleges and universities without taking out loans for tuition. (Clinton's Democratic contenders Martin O'Malley and Bernie Sanders have already released their own plans for a debt-free college education). The plan calls for "significantly cutting the interest rate on student loans so the government never profits when students borrow," according to materials put out by her campaign. Clinton's proposal (read full details here) borrows aspects from both left and right-leaning proposals. But it comes with a hefty price tag: $350 billion over 10 years. Clinton said the program would be paid for by closing tax loopholes and expenditures for the wealthy—a pool of funds President Obama has highlighted in previous budget plans. It also ramps up the level of scrutiny and accountability required of colleges and universities, which have largely skirted responsibility for the student loan excess. About half of the money in Clinton's proposal will be disbursed in the form of grants made to states and colleges, which, in return, have to guarantee no-loan tuition at four-year public colleges and no payments for tuition at community colleges. A third of the funds will go toward cutting student loan interest rates by "nearly half" and refinancing current loans at today's lower interest rates. The remaining funds will go toward creating a so-called innovation fund to provide for things like financial aid for online courses and programs that reward college accountability, such as making sure students complete their degrees. She also aims to expand educational benefits to veterans and students who do national and community service. There is vocal, bipartisan support for the general idea of overhauling the way Americans pay for education but Republicans and Democrats clash on how much of the tab the government should pick up. The debate is likely to get even more heated this fall as Congress gears up to begin the process of reauthorizing the Higher Education Act, the 1965 law that governs federal aid programs, and gain even more steam during the primaries for the 2016 election. |
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