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Student financial aid?qsrc=3044

Student financial aid refers to funding intended to help students pay educational expenses including tuition and fees, room and board, books and supplies, etc. for education at a college, university, or private school. General governmental funding for public education is not called financial aid, which refers to awards to specific individual students. Certain governments, e.g. Nordic countries, provide student benefit. A scholarship is sometimes used as a synonym for a financial aid award, although grants and student loans are also components of financial aid packages from students' intended colleges.

 
Table of Contents
1Types of financial aid
 1.1Merit-based
 1.2Need-based
2Determining Your Student Aid
3Debt vs. grants
 3.1No-loan financial aid
 3.2Loan cap
4In the United States
5Outside the United States
6See also
7References
8External links

Types of financial aid

Financial aid may be classified into two types based on the criteria through which the financial aid is awarded: merit-based or need-based.

Students are expected to received about $168 billion to help fund their college educations during the 2009–2010 academic year. [1] Student aid is awarded as grants and scholarships, low-interest, government-subsidized loans, and education tax benefits, and nearly everyone is eligible for some of it.

In the U.S. to apply for most student aid, a student must first complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) by submitting the application electronically to the U. S. Department of Education's using the Department of Education's Web site [4], or as the law also authorizes, by getting professional assistance from a fee-based preparer. A student's aid application (FAFSA) may be submitted to the Department of Education as early as January 1 before the summer or fall when the student enrolls and must be re-submitted with updated income, asset, and dependency information each year. The Department of Education processes each request and tells a student how much the federal government expects your family to contribute towards paying for college - the Expected Family Contribution (EFC). However, an EFC is not necessarily how much a student will pay for college - aid can reduce an individual's cost. Then, the post-secondary institutions to which a student applies determine how much federal, state, and college-specific aid a student will receive. An individual's student aid award is likely to vary from institution to institution.

Most student aid is federal aid – people's tax dollars working for students. Students received more than $109.7 billion in federal aid during the 2008–2009 academic year. Most federal student aid is awarded as grants and low-interest loans. Grant programs include the Pell Grant, the Academic Competitiveness Grant, the TEACH Grant, and the SMART Grant. Grants are best because they are "free money" – they don't have to be repaid as long as a student meets any obligations they may have.

The federal loan programs include the Federal Direct Subsidized and Federal Direct Unsubsidized Loans, the Perkins Loan, and the Parent PLUS (Parental Loan for Undergraduate Students) Loan and Graduate PLUS (a loan for Graduate students). Unlike with federal grants, a borrower must repay the loan amount and any interest. Federal loans offer lower interest rates and better repayment terms than private student loans from banks and other financial institutions.

Students (or their parents/guardians) can take advantage of education tax benefits to ease the financial burden of attending college. Education tax benefits added up to more than $6.8 billion in 2008–2009. Tax-based education programs include the American Opportunity Tax Credit and the Lifetime Learning Tax Credit. These programs reduce a student's (or his or her parents'/guardians') taxable income while the student attends college.

In addition to federal student aid, students may be eligible for state-based aid. States provide students more than $10.2 billion of aid every year. Each state aid program is different. Usually, a student must reside and attend college in the state providing his/her aid. In some cases, a student can spend state aid on colleges in neighboring states.

Merit-based

Merit-based grants or scholarships include both scholarships awarded by the individual college or university and those awarded by outside organizations. Merit-based scholarships are typically awarded for outstanding academic achievements and minimum SAT or ACT scores, although some merit scholarships can be awarded for special talents, leadership potential and other personal characteristics. Scholarships may also be given because of group affiliation (such as YMCA, Boys Club, etc.). Merit scholarships are sometimes awarded without regard for the financial need of the applicant. At many colleges, every admitted student is automatically considered for merit scholarships. At other institutions, however, a separate application process is required. Scholarships do not need to be repaid as long as all scholarship requirements are met.

Athletic scholarships are a form of merit aid that take athletic talent into account.

Need-based

Need-based financial aid is awarded on the basis of the financial need of the student. The Free Application for Federal Student Aid application (FAFSA) is generally used for determining federal, state, and institutional need-based aid eligibility. At private institutions, a supplemental application may be necessary for institutional need-based aid.

Determining Your Student Aid

Post-secondary institutions post a Cost of Attendance or Price of Attendance, also known as a "sticker price."
However that price is not how much an institution will cost an individual student. To make higher education costs more transparent before a student actually applies to college, federal law requires all post-secondary institutions receiving Title IV funds (federal funds for student aid) to post net price calculators on their Web sites by October 29, 2011.

As defined in The Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008, the net price calculator’s purpose is:

“…to help current and prospective students, families, and other consumers estimate the individual net price of an institution of higher education for a student. The [net price] calculator shall be developed in a manner that enables current and prospective students, families, and consumers to determine an estimate of a current or prospective student’s individual net price at a particular institution.”


The law defines estimated net price as the difference between an institution’s average total Price of Attendance (the sum of tuition and fees, room and board, books and supplies, and other expenses including personal expenses and transportation for a first-time, full-time undergraduate students who receive aid) and the institution’s median need- and merit-based grant aid awarded.
[2]
Elise Miller, program director for the U.S. Department of Education's Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) stated the idea behind the requirement: "We just want to break down the myth of sticker price and get beyond it. This is to give students some indication that they will not [necessarily] be paying that full price."[3] The template was developed based on the suggestions of the an IPEDS’ Technical Review Panel (TRP), which met on January 27-28, 2009, and included 58 individuals representing federal and state governments, postsecondary institutions from all sectors, association representatives, and template contractors. Mary Sapp, Ph.D., assistant vice president for planning and institutional research at the University of Miami, served as the panel’s chair. She described the mandate’s goal as “to provide prospective and current undergraduate students with some insight into the difference between an institution’s sticker price and the price they will end up paying.”[4]

To meet the requirement, post-secondary institutions may choose between a basic template developed by the U.S. Department of Education or an alternative net price calculator that offers at least the minimum elements the law requires.[5]

Debt vs. grants

No-loan financial aid

In 2001, Princeton University became the first university in the United States to eliminate loans from its financial aid packages. Since then, many other schools have followed in eliminating some or all loans from their financial aid programs. Many of these programs are aimed at students whose parents earn less than a certain income — the figures vary by college or university. These new initiatives were designed to attract more students and applicants from lower socioeconomic backgrounds, reduce student debt loads, and provide the offering institutions with an advantage over their rivals in attracting commitments from accepted students. This is an attractive way for students to releive the amount of debt he or she is in after college.

As of March 25, 2008, the list of colleges and universities offering such no-loan financial aid packages includes the following:

Post-secondary InstitutionNo-loan financial aid for families meeting these eligibility requirements:
Amherst CollegeNo max of income
Arizona State UniversityArizona residents with family income of up to $60,000[6]
Bowdoin CollegeNo max of income[7]
Brown UniversityFamily income below $100,000[8]
CaltechAnnual income below $60,000[9]
Claremont McKenna CollegeNo max of income[10]
Colby CollegeNo max of income; all students[11]
Columbia UniversityNo max income[12]
Cornell UniversityAnnual income below $75,000
Dartmouth CollegeAnnual income below $75,000[13]
Davidson CollegeNo max of income
Duke UniversityAnnual income below $40,000[14]
Emory UniversityAnnual income below $100,000
Haverford CollegeFirst-year students with financial need[15]
Harvard UniversityNo max income
Lafayette UniversityAnnual income below $50,000[16]
Lehigh UniversityAnnual income below $50,000[17]
MITAnnual income below $75,000[18]
University of Maryland, College ParkMaryland resident with 0 EFC[19]
Michigan State UniversityMichigan resident with family incomes at or below the federal poverty line[20]
Northwestern UniversityFamily income lower than approx. $55,000[21]
North Carolina State UniversityIncome less than 150% of the poverty line. Requires the family to have "limited assets," regardless of state residency.[22]
University of ChicagoStudents who demonstrate financial need and whose annual family income totals $75,000 or less[23]
UNC Chapel Hill200% of federal poverty line ($24,000 to $37,000)
University of PennsylvaniaAnnual income below $100,000[24]
Pomona CollegeNo max of income[25]
Princeton UniversityNo max of income
Rice UniversityAnnual income below $80,000
Stanford UniversityAnnual income below $45,000
Swarthmore CollegeAnyone with financial need[26]
Tufts UniversityAnnual income below $40,000[27]
Vanderbilt UniversityNo cap.[28]
Vassar CollegeAnnual income below $60,000[29]
University of Virginia200% of federal poverty line ($24,000 to $37,000)
Washington and Lee UniversityNo max of income
Washington University in St. LouisAnnual Income below $60,000[30]
Wellesley College$60,000[31]
Wesleyan University$40,000[32]
College of William and Mary$40,000 (VA residents only)
Williams CollegeNo max of income
Yale UniversityNo max of income

Loan cap

Some universities have opted to have a "loan cap" program, which is a maximum loan — either per year or for the four years combined — designed to reduce the cost of attendance for low-income and middle-class students. The following schools have a loan cap program:

SchoolLoan Cap for students meeting these eligibility requirements:
Brown UniversityFamily earning less than about $125,000: Caps total loans to $3,000 per year. Family earning up to $150,000: Caps total loans to $4,000 per year. Family earning up to $150,000: Caps total loans to $5,000 per year.
University of Chicago"Those whose families make between $60,000 and $75,000 will have 50% of their loans replaced."[23]
Cornell UniversityUndergraduates with family incomes less than $120,000 will have loans limited to $3,000 per year.
Duke UniversityUndergraduate students with family income between $40,000 and $100,000 will have their loans limited on a graduated basis ($1,000 to $4,000 per year) and loans "frozen" at the freshman level. [14]
Emory University"Annual assessed incomes of $50,000 to $100,000 who demonstrate need for financial aid. The program caps total need-based loans at $15,000, assuming on-time progression toward graduation with up to eight semesters of study."[33]
Grinnell College"Beginning in the 2008-09 academic year, need-based loans for all eligible students will be capped at $2,000 per year."[34]
University of Maryland, College ParkStudents with need-based financial aid will have their loans capped at $15,900 for their four years of attendance.[19]
Middlebury CollegeFamily income below $40,000: $1,500 per year; family income $40,000 to $80,000: $2,500 per year; family income above $80,000: $3,500 per year. [35]
Rice UniversityStudents with a family income below $60,000 will not have loans. Families with incomes over $60,000 will have their loans capped at about $14,500.
University of Virginia200% of federal poverty line ($24,000 to $37,000). Loans are capped at 25% of the in-state cost of attendance, regardless of state residency.

In the United States

The United States government and all U.S. state governments provide merit and need-based student aid including grants, work-study, and loans. As of 2010 there are nine federal and 605 state student aid programs and many of the nearly 7,000 post-secondary institutions provide merit aid.

Major federal grants include the Pell Grants, Federal SEOG Grants, SMART Grants, Academic Competitiveness Grants (ACG Grant), Federal Work-Study Program, Federal Stafford Loans (in subsidized and unsubsidized forms), State Student Incentive Grants and Federal PLUS Loans. Federal Perkins Loans are made by participating schools per annual appropriations from the U.S. Department of Education. Federal Stafford Loans and Federal PLUS Loans are made by the U.S. Department of Education. As of April 2010, Congress voted to eliminate the Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP) which had allowed private lenders to make student loans guaranteed by the federal government.

To qualify for federal, state, and institutional aid, a student must prepare a Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) every year. The earliest filing date is January 1 for the upcoming academic year. Federal law authorizes that students have two choices when preparing their federal student aid application, either prepare the application themselves on the Department of Education's Web site, or use the services of a fee-based, professional aid advisory firm.

For the 2010-2011 academic year, the FAFSA was the gateway to about $168 billion in student aid. Most aid is provided on a first-come, first-served basis so it is essential that students prepare and submit their aid applications in as close to January 1 as possible. The aid "window" stays open 18 months in case student's financial circumstances change and require adjustment to their aid application.

The application - approximately 130 questions each year - considers household size, income, assets, the number in college and other financial factors to determine a student's aid eligibility and an expected family contribution (EFC). Institutions use EFC to guide their decision about how much need-based financial aid to award a student.

The EFC also takes into consideration any participation in college savings or pre-paid tuition plans. In the past, financial aid officers weighed pre-paid tuition plans more heavily than other 529 college savings plans when determining a student’s eligibility. In February 2006, Congress passed legislation to treat both types of plans evenly.

State governments also typically provide some types of need- and non-need-based aid, consisting of grants, loans, work-study programs, tuition waivers, and scholarships. Individual colleges and universities may provide grants and need- and merit-based scholarships. Students requiring financial aid beyond what is offered by their institution may consider a private (alternative) education loan, available from most large lending institutions. Typically, education loans obtained through the federal government have lower interest rates than private education loans.

Institutions may also offer their own student financial assistance, in the form of need- or merit-based aid, as well as endowed scholarships (with varying need and/or merit-based criteria). Some institutions may only require the FAFSA; some may also require an additional need-based analysis document, such as the CSS/Profile, to apply for such funds to apply a more stringent need analysis for the rationalization of institutional funds.

Outside the United States

Many national governments provide student financial assistance subsidies, i.e. student benefit, for students attending a university, although proposed policies to change such subsidies have engendered considerable debate in several countries, such as Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands and Scandinavian countries. The heavy reliance on private subsidies, as in the United States, is not as widespread, although this may be changing.

In Germany, the main source of financial aid is provided by the Bundesausbildungsförderungsgesetz, colloquially known as BAFöG.

See also

References

  1. Getting the Most Financial Aid to Pay for College [1]
  2. Association of Institutional Research Net Price Calculator Resource Center [2]
  3. University Business: Preparing for the Net Price Calculator: Avoid Potential Pitfalls by Taking These Steps Today By Haley Chitty, October 2009
  4. Challenges and Opportunities: Meeting the Federal Net Price Calculator Mandate by David Childress, Bill Smith, and Marc Alexander, May 2010
  5. Report and Suggestions from IPEDS Technical Review Panel #26 prepared by RTI International [3]
  6. President Barack Obama Scholars | Arizona State University
  7. Bowdoin Eliminates Student Loans While Vowing to Maintain its Com, Campus News (Bowdoin)
  8. 07-105 (Financial Aid Changes)
  9. Caltech Press Release, 12/11/2007, Jean-Lou Chameau
  10. News Release, News and Events, Claremont McKenna College
  11. Colby College | News & Events | Colby Replaces Loans With Grants, Allowing Students to Graduate Without Debt
  12. Columbia News ::: Columbia Expands Financial Aid
  13. Dartmouth News - Dartmouth announces new financial aid initiative - 01/22/08
  14. 14.0 14.1 New Financial Aid Support
  15. Haverford College News Room
  16. Lafayette strengthens financial aid
  17. Lehigh to enhance financial aid policy
  18. MIT to be tuition-free for families earning less than $75,000 a year - MIT News Office
  19. 19.0 19.1 Interpretations, TERP Magazine Winter 2005
  20. Spartan Advantage Program | Office of Financial Aid | Michigan State University
  21. <Northwestern: Grants Replace Loans for Neediest Students>
  22. Pack Promise
  23. 23.0 23.1 The University of Chicago: Odyssey Scholarships
  24. Penn Admissions: Paying for a Penn Education
  25. Pomona College : News@Pomona
  26. Swarthmore College :: Financial Aid :: More about Swarthmore's
    Expanded Financial Aid Program
  27. Tufts E-News: Tufts University Eliminates Loans for Lower Income Students
  28. http://www.vanderbilt.edu/expandedaidprogram/
  29. Vassar College further strengthens commitment to access and affordability
  30. WUSTL to expand financial aid for low-income families
  31. Wellesley College Increases Financial Aid
  32. http://www.wesleyan.edu/cgi-bin/cdf_manager/template_renderer.cgi?item=57727
  33. Loan Cap Program
  34. Tuition and Financial Aid - Grinnell College
  35. Financial Aid

External links

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