Dignity before debt means students deserve clear support, honest language, and practical options before financial pressure becomes shame, silence, or confusion.
LFAS does not provide financial advice. LFAS can, however, help the public understand why student-support systems should reduce confusion and protect dignity.
Why Dignity Comes First
Students often carry private financial pressure quietly. A dignity-centered support model avoids blame and makes it easier to ask for information, review options, and understand boundaries.
Debt Awareness Is Not Debt Advice
Public education can explain the difference between grants, scholarships, work-study, loans, and private support. It should not tell any student what financial choice to make without qualified review.
How Donors Can Help
Donors can help make support available before students feel forced into rushed decisions. Responsible support gives students more room to communicate, document needs, and stay connected to school pathways.
Related LFAS Paths
- Read Student Dignity and Privacy.
- Review Scholarship Philosophy.
- Visit Donor FAQ.
Reference Points
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau: Applying for Financial Aid.
- USAGov: Types of Student Financial Aid.
- U.S. Department of Education: Paying for College.
Public Boundary
LFAS does not guarantee scholarship support, emergency support, admission, graduation, licensure, employment, donor participation, tax treatment, legal outcome, financial outcome, or any specific benefit. This article is public information, not legal, tax, financial, enrollment, or professional advice.
