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Show me the Money: The Art of Negotiating for a Scholarship
By NCSA
June 16, 2011
In many ways, negotiating for an athletic scholarship is exactly like negotiating for just about anything. As anyone who has seen Jerry Maguire or an episode of Entourage can appreciate, successfully negotiating for something can be as simple as convincing your negotiating partner that you can offer something he absolutely needs. A program has something you want or need (scholarship money), and so you must show the program that you have something they want or need (a talented student-athlete). The key to negotiating for a scholarship is effectively leveraging the uncommon assets and characteristics you bring to the table as a student-athlete, so that a program can feel comfortable offering you a share of its limited pool of scholarship money.
It’s important to remember that schools place great value on student-athletes who have unique skills other than simply their ability to play a particular sport. At Division III and Division I non-scholarship programs, for example, purely athletic scholarships are not offered, so an athlete’s ability to play the saxophone, tap-dance or edit the high school yearbook can help earn the scholarship money necessary to allow him or her to play a sport at the college level. These schools are attracted to athletes to whom they can offer academic, need-based, or non-need-based scholarships, making performance in the classroom just as valuable as on-the-field talent when it comes to negotiating for a scholarship. Although a school’s initial interest in you results from athletic talent, your extracurricular and academic talents can open the door to better scholarship offers, so be sure to make these schools aware of these special skills.
The more interest or offers you have received, the more valuable and attractive you will appear to coaches, and thus the more power you’ll have to negotiate for scholarship money. Be sure that any school in which you’re interested is aware that you’ve received active interest from other schools, and that you haven’t placed all of your eggs in their basket. Programs don’t want to ‘miss the boat’ on a great recruit, and, perhaps more importantly, they don’t want to risk watching you accept an offer from a rival. Don’t be afraid to initiate a friendly bidding war between rival schools vying for your talent. If a school believes that it is your primary or only option, it won’t find it necessary to offer you a particularly generous scholarship.
Lastly, remember that no negotiation is truly complete until both sides have signed on the dotted line. In the scholarship context, this means that a student-athlete mustn’t rely on undocumented promises from coaches, and should always keep his or her options open until the official signing of the offer from a school. Be sure to ask for the scholarship offer in writing, and always know how much time you have to accept the offer.
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Patricia_White
8 months ago
Hello,
My name is Patricia White. My reason for wanting this scholarship is to insure that my main goal is achieved.
I am a grandmother of five who recently as of two years ago finished her GED. Education was not stressed as a child when growing up. As an adult and having hard times and wanting a career that would make myself and children finacially stable has been my motivation for a higer degree.
My goal in life is to complete my education and have the knowledge and learning to have that sucessful career, and not worry so much on the finacial side.
I am trying to instill in my children that education is very important to be a sucessful person in life and have a promising career with substance.
jesshasenauer
9 months ago
My daughter is in the Marching band for our town. I would like her to apply for this scholarship, although the color guard is not a sport. Her love of it and commitment to it is unwavering. Her bunps and bruises in the same spots one over the other from throwing and twirling her rifle, and sword. The agonizing sun beating down her, on the field as she is totally commited to do what she loves.This sounds a lot like a sport to me.
Her other passions are math and sciences, she loves physics, so wants to attend a very expensive college."Hopefully one with a colorguard, so she can continue with her other passion".
She has recieived an award from the Chemical Society of the Northeast,USA. She has a 3.88 average, or a 4.376 with our scholl basing it on a scale 4.5 being the best. She loves school, she loves to learn.
I am not educated my self and l would love for my daughter to be. I cannot offer her the Ivy league school ,like MIT her #1 choice., so o she has to apply for scholarships any and all that she is eligible for.
So can she apply t this one?
Sincerely,
Sandra Hasenauer(mother)