This was incredibly useful! Thank you Sachin and Chandini. The topic of education loan really freaked me out earlier and I was extremely nervous about availing one until now! I feel confident in applying to universities and chasing my dreams. I owe it to you. :)
So, UC Davis says "Gre is waived for all courses except Agricultural and Resource Economics for 2021-22 cycle". This 2021-2022 cycle means admissions for fall'21, right? And not for Fall'22?
Can I take the gre in october ..i know its a bit late But My preparation is incomplete until september..n 1 months for revision..is it okay???..plz reply!..
This was so good..... Thank you Sir I had registered for your gre webinar and also received the mail but I have missed it twice as I could not find the link to join the webinar. Kindly look into this matter. ......
Hi Suchona, it might be possible for me to give you a direct entry link you can use to join the session next time. Contact us at connect@sachinpullil.com and we'll help :)
Hey Sachin. Just stumbled upon this lengthy but informative session. Is an FD equal to the amount of tuition + stay expenses considered as proof of liquid funds? Or 1) a loan on the FD (was mentioned multiple times in the session but seemed weird) or 2) liquidating the investment required to show proof of funds?
Hi Abhinav, I believe an Fixed Deposit (short term, not a long-term locked one) does count as proof of liquid funds for university applications. But as she mentions in the video, it might not be a good idea to self-fund your program if it drains all your savings in one shot. Instead, she recommends using the FD as collateral to secure an education loan. This allows you to study as well as keep the money in the FD.
@@SachinPullil150 Thanks for the quick revert, appreciate it. So let me get this - We are looking at two things 1) Trying to retain savings for a rainy day/ emergencies and 2) Cost of funding which would be ~9% for loan (with the tax benefits etc.) or ~5% for fixed deposits (opportunity cost of FD interest lets say 5%). Any other factor I might be missing here? Some excel or online calculator you could suggest
@@abhinavgupta3679 Yes, I think that's it. I don't have a calculator for interest/savings exactly, but I did a video where I have a calculator to show you how long you'll take to pay back your loan: ruclips.net/video/3r23U2JH9QM/видео.html
This was incredibly useful! Thank you Sachin and Chandini.
The topic of education loan really freaked me out earlier and I was extremely nervous about availing one until now! I feel confident in applying to universities and chasing my dreams. I owe it to you. :)
what are the documents required to get a loan? like... income tax returns or income certificate.
So, UC Davis says "Gre is waived for all courses except Agricultural and Resource Economics for 2021-22 cycle". This 2021-2022 cycle means admissions for fall'21, right?
And not for Fall'22?
No, that's Fall 22.
Thank you for your prompt reply.
Also, is it advisable to take IELTS/TOEFL before GRE?
@@ananyasingh2880 Yup, that's what I usually advise.
Can I take the gre in october ..i know its a bit late But My preparation is incomplete until september..n 1 months for revision..is it okay???..plz reply!..
This was so good..... Thank you
Sir I had registered for your gre webinar and also received the mail but I have missed it twice as I could not find the link to join the webinar. Kindly look into this matter. ......
Hi Suchona, it might be possible for me to give you a direct entry link you can use to join the session next time. Contact us at connect@sachinpullil.com and we'll help :)
Sir can i apply to ms in cs after bachelor of computer application (BCA)
Hey Sachin. Just stumbled upon this lengthy but informative session. Is an FD equal to the amount of tuition + stay expenses considered as proof of liquid funds? Or 1) a loan on the FD (was mentioned multiple times in the session but seemed weird) or 2) liquidating the investment required to show proof of funds?
Hi Abhinav, I believe an Fixed Deposit (short term, not a long-term locked one) does count as proof of liquid funds for university applications. But as she mentions in the video, it might not be a good idea to self-fund your program if it drains all your savings in one shot. Instead, she recommends using the FD as collateral to secure an education loan. This allows you to study as well as keep the money in the FD.
@@SachinPullil150 Thanks for the quick revert, appreciate it. So let me get this - We are looking at two things 1) Trying to retain savings for a rainy day/ emergencies and 2) Cost of funding which would be ~9% for loan (with the tax benefits etc.) or ~5% for fixed deposits (opportunity cost of FD interest lets say 5%). Any other factor I might be missing here? Some excel or online calculator you could suggest
@@abhinavgupta3679 Yes, I think that's it. I don't have a calculator for interest/savings exactly, but I did a video where I have a calculator to show you how long you'll take to pay back your loan: ruclips.net/video/3r23U2JH9QM/видео.html
First view
2nd view