Posts Tagged ‘school’

To Loan or Not to Loan

September 1st, 2010
Pay the Price

Pay the Price

That is the question…here.

I can’t answer that for you.  I am thinking about it.

The student loan process is a lot simpler and easier than it was when I started my MBA some 18 years.  It seems to be a lot easier to get a lot of money for school and that is very DANGEROUS.  That you can get a lot of money for school doesn’t mean that you should take it.  I think the best method is to pay cash…that was until I reviewed my tax returns from 2009.

This info applies to me.

I am a struggling professional (full-time) photographer with a part-time job to help pay for grad school.  Think of the part-time job as putting food on the table, gas in the car, and rent while I pay for tuition and all my business costs from my business income.

Financially speaking: I am poor

I am not a CPA and I highly recommend you find and use a good one.

Now, looking at my 1040 I see that I have a tuition deduction of $4000 but I paid well over twice that amount and I don’t get credit for doing so.  Why not see if I can spread the cost of tuition over a longer period of time and receive the tax credit in the future.  Seems reasonable don’t you think?

This brings me to some research to determine how my future student loan payments affect my bottom line on my annual taxes.  This is from the IRS:

Publication 970 (2009), Tax Benefits for Education  (link here)

Paid with borrowed funds. You can claim a tuition and fees deduction for qualified education expenses paid with the proceeds of a loan. Use the expenses to figure the deduction for the year in which the expenses are paid, not the year in which the loan is repaid. Treat loan payments sent directly to the educational institution as paid on the date the institution credits the student’s account.

Ah ha!  So it seem I can reduce my adjusted gross income (AGI) with student loans but I cannot deffer the reduction to my AGI when I actually get around to paying the loan back.  Hmmm…so much for cash basis accounting.

Should I take the loans?  Should I increase the length of my stay at my institution?

While I have been offered over $32,000 in aid for the coming school year (2010-2011) I may only accept and use about $8,000.  I’m probably going to take the direct subsidized loans for at least one semester this year.  I have already spent over 4-grand on tuition so I’ll get that deduction for my 2010 taxes.  This is a side benefit of why I’m taking a loan.  I’m planning a major surgery in early 2011 and I won’t be able to work for about a month.  Given that I’m (barely) self-employed I don’t have things like vacation time I can dip into while I’m recovering.  Taking out this loan will allow me to pay for immediate tuition expenses, and conserve cash over the next few months for the time when I can’t work…seems to be reasonable financial planning.

As always (and as everyone seems to disclaim – rightfully so) consult a tax professional about your needs.

I strongly recommend that without any disclaimer!




No Summer School

July 21st, 2010
A tilled bean field shot while I was NOT enrolled in Summer classes.

A tilled bean field shot while I was NOT enrolled in Summer classes.

I’m so happy I didn’t take Summer courses.  I may take some next year and I may still do one of those wacky 15-day intersession courses.

There are few things I’m happy about.

Being able to travel and shoot for myself.  This included starting up a workshop and scouting locations in the beautiful Northern Nevada high plains.

Saving up money for Fall tuition is important.

Not having to constantly switch between being a student and being a pro-photographer as I do when I’m working and attending classes.

I have to go back to my days in grad school where my friends and I would look forward to starting the next year of school.  The break makes me a bit nostalgic for going back to school.  If I had taken Summer courses I would still be excited about the classes I’m heading for this Fall semester but it might also be some continuation of the grind of schoolwork.

There is some unneeded rationalization here that follows the line of taking it slower makes me learn more and learn it deeper – that may be true, or not.

I will not be qualified as soon as I originally planned (as I need 18 hours in my subject field to teach at a collegiate level), but for me, plans are just that and subject to change.

Overall, it’s a good thing to take a little more time for me, save up a little cash, spend a little more time with friends (which actually means spending more time working as most of my friends are out of town on vacations) and get excited about Fall courses at AAU.

Thinking about the Spring 2010 Semester at AAU

February 19th, 2010



Thinking

Thinking

I’ve been busy this semester and posts do fall off during school terms because I’m busy doing school work.  Some highlights from the 3rd week of this semester.

History of Photography GS 625 is kicking my ass.  In order for me to do better and do well I need to kick it back harder.  This class takes up more time that my other two classes combined.  I easily spend 25+ hours a week working on papers and reading for this class.

My Lighting class (PH608) is somewhat challenging I look forward to some of the more difficult assignments.  These will take up some more time but with good planning and some working ahead in class I think this course is very manageable.  This class is an elective for me.

PH 613 (was Color Theory) but the course title changed to ‘Color and Light’ during the third week.  This course has a lot of overlap with my lighting class, so far.  This makes sense as photography is all about light and light is about color – even if doing black and white work.  The instructor and I agree that the assignments later on in the semester will be more interesting for me.   BUT, it is really important that I don’t get jaded and do work to just get by for the first few weeks.  This is an opportunity to spend more time of creating a photograph for an assignment where I’m already well versed in the foundation that is being taught.  Don’t slack!

So that’s the update during week 3 of a 15 week semester.  I’d like to posts weekly but I find the workload of school (esp. History) and my day-to-day work to consume almost all my free time.

It is an adventure for sure!

First day of school!

September 2nd, 2009
33_AMLI_Fashion

Learning never stops

Wow!  It’s my first day of school.

I remember going off to my first days of school at various times in my life.  There was kindergarten at some private school in Pasadena.  Then there was starting 1st grade which I still either recall or I’ve just made up a fake memory for it with mom taking me to class too.  There were plenty of brown bag school lunches and even a couple lunchboxes that are probably worth 10-grand, if new.

Starting my undergrad was a big deal as I moved myself to Goleta to attend UCSB.  I had to find an apartment and figure out roommates.

Getting my MBA was cool.  There was a lot of orientation stuff that somehow mixed booze into the formula so the orientation events were actually more fun than not.  I recall going to my first class on my first day, driving 30 minutes to school, parking, walking across campus, meeting up with some other new students for coffee then off to a Managmenet Science course that was being taught by a new MS professor.  It was at 8am.  Being near last in the alphabet is still a curse I thought to myself when I had to register for those 8am courses my first semester.

Today,  I don’t drink coffee, mom is in a nursing facility in California (fortunately my sister lives nearby), and I don’t even leave home to attend class.  Heck I didn’t even leave home to go get books thanks to Amazon, ebay, and other places.  Now the books come to me via FedEx Ground, USPS, and UPS.

Change happens.

I’ve logged into both courses and I really don’t know what to expect of the courses.  What I mean by that is I don’t know what the course dynamic will be like.  I know what the reading material is and I have some idea as to the content of each course.  What really makes a course is the students and the instructor.  As a former instructor I know  that instructors have good and bad days and classes vary too.

I’m interested and excited to see what will happen.

No one will be making me sack lunches for this degree – I love you mom.