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Self-Help Options

Assistantships:
Many graduate students, especially after their first year, become teaching or research assistants. Through this arrangement, teaching assistants help professors by leading seminar sections, reading papers, and meeting with undergraduates.

Research assistants, common in the sciences, oversee laboratories and assist professors on projects. Both arrangements allow students to earn money while gaining experience in their field. Some universities also reduce tuition for students working as assistants.

Assistantships provide stipends and/or tuition remission in exchange. In some programs, assistantships are awarded to every student; in others they are awarded competitively, based on academic performance.

Employment:
Although employment is not a financial aid program in the traditional sense, many graduate students help finance their education with income from full- or part-time jobs. Some students choose part-time programs, extending the amount of time it takes to receive a degree, but allowing them to finance all or part of their education through employment.

Some employers will provide tuition reimbursement for their employees. In most cases, you'll have to commit to working for the company for a number of years after you've earned your business degree.

Student Loans:
Most grad students try to minimize the loan component of their financing, but sometimes that just simply isn't possible.

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