Michael Perrone Profile picture
Aug 22, 2019 22 tweets 3 min read Read on X
How I went to college and graduated in 3 years without any debt or parental assistance.

A thread.
My senior year in high school, I was accepted to the University of Texas at Austin. That year (2002) my family's household income was less than $40k.

As an 18 year old, I had about $3,000 to my name.
Tuition was about $2,500 a semester. It would have been an immense financial burden on my family to pay for school.

I didn't want to take out loans.
I figured I could get a job, but I had no idea what would be available to me as a Freshman the next year.
So I did the only thing I could think of.

Every few weeks during my senior year, I went to the counselor's office where they had a filing cabinet with a list of every scholarship my school knew about.

I never saw a single classmate touch that filing cabinet.
Many scholarships I didn't qualify for off the bat.

I wasn't a minority.
My family didn't live in poverty.
I didn't have any amazing musical, academic or athletic abilities.
But many I did qualify for or could qualify for if I put time into it.

All I had to do was write essays

Creative essays
Personal essays
Historical essays
I wrote about the future of transportation in Austin
I wrote about the history of Texas Senators
I wrote about the civil war
I wrote a short story about a superhero
I even applied for a scholarship exclusive to Italian Americans & played up my (genuine) Sicilian connections.
You name it, I wrote it my senior year.
Writing dozens of essays was my most demanding class that year. But unlike most of my school work, I saw a tangible benefit.

I'll never forget when I won my first scholarship... the Papa John's scholarship for $1,000.
A pizza delivery guy came to my English Class w/pizza for the whole room & a giant paper check (the only giant check I've received thus far)

Next came a scholarship from a local Austin Optimist Club for $500.
Then a scholarship check from another Austin group for $2,500.
This is nice I remember thinking. Got my first year mostly paid for.

Then I hit the jackpot. One day in the mail I got a big envelope from Chase Bank.

Credit card offer?
Student savings account ads?

Nope, another scholarship worth $5,000 a year.
I don't even remember what I wrote to earn that one.
An essay about my goals and dreams?

It all ran together. I applied for so many scholarships, it wouldn't surprise me if at one point I sent someone the wrong essay.
After the Chase scholarship, I got a few other small ones.

One of the last I was up for was the Texas Exes Scholarship. Would have paid for my schooling all by itself.
I made it to the group of finalists and went in for an interview and the interviewer all but told me I would be one of the winners.

But then he said, "one last question, have you won any other scholarships?
Naive kid that I was, I excitedly told him about all the other scholarships I won.

His attitude took a 180. Financial need was one of the requirements and I didn't need this scholarship anymore.

I was politely but quickly shown the door.
On the one hand, I had a horrible success rate:

I applied for nearly 50 scholarships and won only a dozen.

But the ones I won made all the difference.
But scholarship money was just Part 1.

I also took as many AP classes as I could

History
English
Spanish
Stats
Economics
Government
Etc.
I got a 4 or 5 on every single one allowing me to enter college with over 40 credits, enough to be considered a Sophomore and taking one whole year off my time at school.
Because I would graduate early I was able to convince the Chase folks to reallocate my scholarship funds such that every semester not only did I NOT pay for tuition, I actually got a check for leftover scholarship money.
I also got an extra $1,000 at graduation from the University of Texas for graduating early.
My only regret is that I worked just 1 of my 3 years in school. Working paid for my other expenses but I could have banked a lot more if I had waited tables or something.
Anyway, that's how I graduated college with a bachelors degree and with no debt, family assistance or spending any of my own money.

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A few things that stood out to me...
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2) Spent all day Saturday in 1 hour training meetings with various groups. As he rattled off all the countries he's been to in the last 10 weeks, it drove home to me that these men truly are traveling disciples and witnesses of Christ.
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1 like = 1 lesson I've learned in the last year.
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I quit so my family and I could really commit to our principles and our desired way of living.

I was tired of a steady paycheck getting in the way of that.
2/ I've seen it said many times, but it's struck me just how much public school & college prepared me to be a good employee and how it did almost nothing to prepare me to be an employer.
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