As the next high school graduating class gets ready for college, tuition has never been a more important issue because of today’s tough economy. If you’re looking for ways to offset tuition for your kids, private scholarships are still available that don’t require perfect grades, a musical genius, or a great 3-point shot.
For example, www.FastWeb.com lists more than 1.5 million scholarships worth more than $3.4 billion, matching opportunities to your child’s unique profile. It’s important to note that you should never pay any application fees for scholarships.
Begin your search with your child’s guidance counselor. The financial-aid representative at the schools you’re applying to can also lead to you to other legitimate scholarship opportunities. And for a list of schools and universities in L.A. county with tips about student housing then click here.
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Filed under: Buying, College-Bound, Money-Saving, Relocating to LA | Tagged: Colleges and Universities, Education, Financial Aid, High school, Private school, Scholarship, Student financial aid, Tuition | Leave a comment »
Happiness, like the flu, spreads from person to person.
Nicholas Christakis
By Dan Ariely
Social scientists used to have a straightforward, if tongue-in-cheek, answer to the question of how to become happy: Surround yourself with people who are uglier, poorer and shorter than you are — and who are unhappily married and have annoying kids. You will compare yourself with these people, and the contrast will cheer you up.
Nicholas Christakis, 47, a physician and sociologist at Harvard University, challenges this idea. Using data from a study that tracked about 5,000 people over 20 years, he suggests that When people who are close to us, both in terms of social ties (friends or relatives) and physical proximity, become happier, we do too. For example, when a person who lives within a mile of a good friend becomes happier, the probability that this person’s good friend will also become happier increases 15%. More surprising is that the effect can transcend direct links and reach a third degree of separation: when a friend of a friend becomes happier, we become happier, even when we don’t know that third person directly.
This means that surrounding ourselves with happier people will make us happier, make the people close to us happier — and make the people close to them happier. But social networks don’t transmit only the good things in life.
Christakis found that smoking and obesity can be socially infectious too. If his thesis proves out, then the saying that you can judge a person by his or her friends might carry more weight than we thought.
Ariely is the James B. Duke professor of behavioral science at Duke University and the author of the best seller “Predictably Irrational”
Fast Fact: Smokers have been pushed from the center of their social webs, Christakis found
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Filed under: Commentary, Current Events, Humor | Tagged: Dan Ariely, Duke University, Education, Harvard University, James B. Duke Professor, Obesity, Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions, United States | Leave a comment »