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Know who you’re dealing with. It may
be a search company that is offering to help locate scholarships for
which you may be eligible, rather than a foundation that actually
awards scholarships. Most foundations don’t charge a fee to apply
for a scholarship; if they do, it is very small. Scholarship search
companies always charge for their services.
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Beware of search services that guarantee
you’ll receive scholarship money. No search service can
control the decisions of scholarship sponsors.
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Be cautious about emails offering
scholarship assistance. Many unsolicited emails are fraudulent.
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Get the all the details. A search
service should be willing to give you a detailed explanation of
exactly how it works and how much it costs.
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Make sure you understand the refund policy.
The company should explain upfront whether you can get your money
back if you don’t receive a scholarship and what you have to do to
qualify for a refund. Some fraudulent search services set difficult
requirements, such as obtaining letters of rejection from each
scholarship listing, to make it virtually impossible to get a
refund.
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Do your own scholarship search. A search
service may provide information that is outdated or doesn’t apply
to you. You may be better off finding scholarships yourself. Ask
your high school guidance counselor and college financial aid
offices for help. Another good source of information is College
Parents of America, 703-761-6702 or www.collegeparents.org.