You may be able to deduct qualified tuition and related expenses that you
                     pay for yourself, your spouse, or a dependent. To determine whether your expenses
                     are qualified, refer to Topic 605 or Publication 970, Tax
                           Benefits for Education. You do not have to itemize to take this deduction
                     because it is treated as an adjustment to income. You can claim qualified
                     tuition and fees as either: (1) an adjustment to income, as directed above;
                     or (2) a Hope or Lifetime Learning credit.
                  You cannot deduct higher education expenses on your income tax return if
                     you or anyone else claims a Hope or Lifetime learning credit based on those
                     SAME expenses.
                  You cannot claim a deduction or credit based on expenses paid with tax-free
                     scholarship, fellowship, grant, or education savings account funds such as
                     a Coverdell education savings account, tax-free savings bond interest or employer-provided
                     education assistance. The same rule applies to expenses you pay with a tax-exempt
                     distribution from a qualified tuition plan, except that you can deduct qualified
                     expenses you pay only with that part of the distribution that is a return
                     of your contribution to the plan. You cannot deduct qualified education expenses
                     you deduct anywhere else on your return, such as a business expense. Refer
                     to Topics 310, 403 and 421.
                     Also, you cannot deduct these expenses if your gross income exceeds certain
                     limits explained in Publication 970