Skip to content
NOWCAST 바카라게임 온라인 바카라 게임 5 at 5:30
Live Now
Advertisement

Dozens of students were told they received full college scholarships. Then they learned it was a mistake

Dozens of students were told they received full college scholarships. Then they learned it was a mistake
College is a coming of age experience, but it is also a very expensive one, According to a study of 2000 American parents of prospective college students, conducted by one poll on behalf of college jobs. Student loans found that the parents expect room board intuition to cost around $26,000 per year. 71 of parents are nervous about paying for college after the uncertainty caused by the pandemic. Yet parents are talking to their kids about finances and 57 are confident that their students have the budget knowledge they need. The college of student loans study found that parents think these are the smartest ways to pay for college, 85 savings account or income, 62 scholarships or grants, 48 federal student loans, 26 college savings funds and 17 private student loans. Hopefully those kids really are good at budgeting. Yeah.
Advertisement
Dozens of students were told they received full college scholarships. Then they learned it was a mistake
Parker Christensen, a high school senior from Newaygo, Michigan, received a notification from Central Michigan University on Jan. 21 informing him that he had been awarded a prestigious full-ride scholarship to the university.University officials now say that Christensen and 57 other students received the notification in error."When I opened up the email saying 'Congratulations,' my heart stopped like, I was blown away," Christensen, 18, who wants to pursue pre-med at CMU, told CNN. "I couldn't believe that I was part of this group, probably out of like 600 kids that applied for it. It was amazing."After he was accepted to CMU in October, Christensen applied for the university's prestigious Centralis Scholar Award. Recipients are given full tuition and room and board for four years, according to the university's website. They also receive a $5,000 study away award.Christensen said he had to submit essays, a creative project in which he chose to paint a picture, his GPA, high school transcripts and recommendation letters. He estimates he spent 48 hours to put together the scholarship application.This past weekend, he received a notification that he was a recipient of the scholarship."I kept rereading it over and over just making sure that I actually got it and it was me," he said. "And then once I found the form, and I accepted...I was just so proud of myself for all the hard work I did."University now offering a full tuition scholarshipBut CMU said that notification was sent mistakenly to 58 students. Now, the university says it is reaching out to the impacted students "to make it right" and award them with an amount equivalent to a full-tuition scholarship."While testing a new messaging technology over the weekend, CMU staff inadvertently posted a message about the prestigious Centralis Scholar Award that was seen by students who were logged into the system at that time," the university said in a statement. "The message appeared to indicate the student had received the Centralis Scholarship, when in fact they had not. CMU deeply regrets the disappointment and frustration this mistake caused for students and their families."Christensen said he was heartbroken when he was contacted by the university."Getting that phone call, my heart sank," he said. "I was second guessing even going to CMU... I was just angry and disappointed in what they did to me and other 57 other students."Now that the school has said it will award those students affected with the equivalent to a full-tuition scholarship, Christensen said "it's a lot to take in.""It's such an emotional roller coaster. I've been up and down, sad and mad and angry and confused," he said. "I still am now. I don't know how all this is happening."CMU noted that the Centralis Scholar Awards that were inadvertently offered to the 58 students included room and board. The offer the university is extending to these students is equivalent to a full-tuition scholarship but does not include room and board, according to an email from the university.

Parker Christensen, a high school senior from Newaygo, Michigan, received a notification from Central Michigan University on Jan. 21 informing him that he had been awarded a prestigious full-ride scholarship to the university.

University officials now say that Christensen and 57 other students received the notification in error.

Advertisement

"When I opened up the email saying 'Congratulations,' my heart stopped like, I was blown away," Christensen, 18, who wants to pursue pre-med at CMU, told CNN. "I couldn't believe that I was part of this group, probably out of like 600 kids that applied for it. It was amazing."

After he was accepted to CMU in October, Christensen applied for the university's prestigious . Recipients are given full tuition and room and board for four years, according to the . They also receive a $5,000 study away award.

Christensen said he had to submit essays, a creative project in which he chose to paint a picture, his GPA, high school transcripts and recommendation letters. He estimates he spent 48 hours to put together the scholarship application.

This past weekend, he received a notification that he was a recipient of the scholarship.

"I kept rereading it over and over just making sure that I actually got it and it was me," he said. "And then once I found the form, and I accepted...I was just so proud of myself for all the hard work I did."

University now offering a full tuition scholarship

But CMU said that notification was sent mistakenly to 58 students. Now, the university says it is reaching out to the impacted students "to make it right" and award them with an amount equivalent to a full-tuition scholarship.

"While testing a new messaging technology over the weekend, CMU staff inadvertently posted a message about the prestigious Centralis Scholar Award that was seen by students who were logged into the system at that time," the university said in a statement. "The message appeared to indicate the student had received the Centralis Scholarship, when in fact they had not. CMU deeply regrets the disappointment and frustration this mistake caused for students and their families."

Christensen said he was heartbroken when he was contacted by the university.

"Getting that phone call, my heart sank," he said. "I was second guessing even going to CMU... I was just angry and disappointed in what they did to me and other 57 other students."

Now that the school has said it will award those students affected with the equivalent to a full-tuition scholarship, Christensen said "it's a lot to take in."

"It's such an emotional roller coaster. I've been up and down, sad and mad and angry and confused," he said. "I still am now. I don't know how all this is happening."

CMU noted that the Centralis Scholar Awards that were inadvertently offered to the 58 students included room and board. The offer the university is extending to these students is equivalent to a full-tuition scholarship but does not include room and board, according to an email from the university.