U.S. News and World Report reports:
Every year, approximately 65,000 undocumented students -- many of whom were brought to the country at a young age by a parent or guardian -- graduate from U.S. high schools. For many, this is the end of their education.
Undocumented students cannot legally receive federal student financial aid of any form, including loans, grants and scholarships. At the state level, most require undocumented students to pay out-of-state tuition to attend public colleges and universities and prohibit the students from receiving state loans, grants and other financial help. Private college tuition can be just as daunting for the vast majority of students.
There's more:
However, scholarships are available to help high-achieving undocumented students pursue their dreams of going to college.
TheDream.US calls itself the country's largest program for DREAMers -- students who qualify for DACA status. TheDream.US has committed close to $43 million to 1,700 students. The organization offers two scholarships for high-achieving undocumented students.
The National Scholarship is open to current or soon-to-be high school or community college graduates who qualify for in-state tuition at TheDream.US' partner schools, which include Arizona State University--Tempe, San Jose State University and Colorado State University. The National Scholarship pays for tuition and fees up to $12,500 for an associate degree and $25,000 for a bachelor's.
TheDream.US also offers the Opportunity Scholarship for current and soon-to-be high school graduates who live in states that do not offer in-state tuition to undocumented students. Applicants must have or be eligible for DACA status and intend to enroll full time in a partner school's bachelor's degree program.
Attention Jeff Sessions: this could be a major RICO case to enable illegal immigration hurting the 14th Amendment rights of legals residents. It's not like they didn't do the work for you!