Lesson 798 of 2116
AI for Translating Financial-Aid Letters
Aid letters use deliberately confusing language. Loans look like grants, 'awards' include money you have to pay back. AI can translate the letter — and tell you the real number you owe.
Lesson map
What this lesson covers
Learning path
The main moves in order
- 1Why aid letters are confusing on purpose
- 2financial aid letter
- 3net cost
- 4loans vs grants
Concept cluster
Terms to connect while reading
Section 1
Why aid letters are confusing on purpose
Many financial-aid award letters list a 'total package' that includes loans (money you pay back), work-study (money you earn), and grants (money you keep). They often look the same on the page. Schools have been criticized for years for this, and the format is finally being standardized — but slowly.
A safe AI workflow
- 1Black out your name, ID number, and SSN before pasting.
- 2Paste the letter and ask: 'Sort each line into grant, scholarship, loan (subsidized vs unsubsidized), work-study, or other.'
- 3Then ask: 'What is my real net cost — total cost minus only grants and scholarships?'
- 4Then ask: 'How much would I owe in student loans after 4 years if I take all loans listed each year?'
Compare the options
| Looks like aid | Actually is | Real cost to you |
|---|---|---|
| Direct Subsidized Loan | Federal loan, no interest while enrolled | Pay back after graduation |
| Direct Unsubsidized Loan | Federal loan, interest accrues now | Pay back, plus more |
| Pell Grant | Federal grant | Free money |
| Federal Work-Study | Job that pays you | Earn it; no debt |
| PLUS Loan | Loan in your parent's name | They owe; high rate |
Key terms in this lesson
End-of-lesson quiz
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