Title: Coordination of College Savings Programs and Financial Aid
1Coordination of College Savings Programs and
Financial Aid
2Where It All Started
- College Scholarship Service (CSS) established by
the College Board (1954) - Support awarding of need-based aid
- Higher Education Act of 1965 (HEA)
- Federal legislative umbrella
- Title IV Programs
3College Financing Myths
- No One Can Pay Total Cost of College
- No One Can Save the Total Cost
- No One Receives Enough Financial Aid
4College Financing Myths
- No One Can Pay Total Cost of College
- No one does pay the total cost
- State subsidies and private endowments
- Few families pay the sticker price
- No One Can Save the Total Cost
- Few should target total cost
- Target should be share of college cost (EFC)
- No One Receives Enough Financial Aid
- Millions of students share billions of dollars
5So, How Does It All Work . . . What is
Financial Need?
- Total College Costs
- EFC
- Need/Aid Eligibility
Expected Family Contribution
6What is an Expected Family Contribution (EFC)?
- Federal EFC
- An eligibility index for federal programs
- Determined by data from the Free
Application for Federal Student Aid - Institutional EFC
- A familys ability to pay
- Determines eligibility for non-federal aid
- Based on CSS/Financial Aid PROFILE data
7Principles of Financial Aid
- Families are expected to pay
- Parent and student contributions
- Most Financial aid is need-based
- Other criteria often considered (merit awards,
athletic aid etc.) - Aid to meet total budget
8So, wheres the money . . .
. . . who gets it and how much do they get?
9Financial Aid Sources
TOTAL AID AWARDED (74.4 billion)
2000-2001 Academic Year
10How many students get what?
- More than ½ receive assistance
- 9.2 million students in 1999-2000
- Award range zero to infinity
- Average 99-00 package 6,265
- Higher cost more eligibility
- 15,000 private college grant typical
- Family incomes 0 to 200,000
- 1999-2000 report shows Federal aid to 70 of 20,000 and 25 of 100,000
11It All Begins with the FAFSA and Federal
Financial Aid
12Federal Student Aid College Savings Plans
- Jeff Andrade
- Deputy Assistant Secretary,
- Postsecondary Education Policy
- U.S. Department of Education
13Overview of Federal Student Aid
- Over 69 billion in Federal grants, new loans,
work-study, and loan consolidations in 2002-03. - Over 8 million students will receive federal
financial aid more than half of all students
enrolled in U.S.. - 570,000 parents will borrow federally-guaranteed
loans.
14Federal Student Aid Programs
- Pell Grants Portable vouchers targeted at
low-income students - Stafford Loans Subsidized and
Unsubsidized/Portable FFEL and Direct - Work-Study Campus-based employment assistance
- Perkins Campus-based low-interest fixed rate
loans - Supplemental Grants Campus-based need-based
grants
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17How Do Students Apply for Aid?
- Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)
- Paper or Electronic Application
- Expected Family Contribution (EFC) determined by
need analysis formula in the Higher Education Act - Need Cost of Attendance - EFC
18Federal Need Methodology
- Income
- AGI
- -Taxes Paid
- Untaxed Income
- Certain Benefits
- Living Allowance
- VA (non-ed)
- Assets
- Cash/Savings
- Investments
- Farm/Business
Expected Family Contribution
19Federal Formula Asset Protection
20How 529 Plans Interact with Federal Formula
- Section 480(j) of HEA requires tuition
prepayment plans to reduce cost of attendance.
Does not affect EFC, but lowers need. - Law is silent on section 529 savings plans,
Coverdell savings accounts. Treated as savings.
Can affect EFC if amount exceeds asset allowances.
21Saving Toward College Costs
Why bother?
22Grant/Loan Imbalance
Loans
58
Grants
Grants
41
Loans
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24Saving and planning never more important or
possible!
- Saving tools never as expansive
- Good News/Bad News?
- Education IRA/Coverdell ESA
- Section 529 Plans
- State-sponsored saving programs
- Prepaid tuition plans
- Custodial accounts
25Section 529
State-sponsored Plans
- Best option for most people
- No income-eligibility limit
- Total control over the money
- Complete portability
- Tax-free interest growth
- Tax-free distribution
26So, what does it mean?
- 5,000 invested each year for 18 years
- 287,704 in a Section 529 plan
- 250,157 in a Custodial Account
- 224,527 in a taxable account (10 interest)
- Timing is everything!
- The earlier the better to ensure growth
27CSS/Financial Aid PROFILE ?
28PROFILE information supports Institutional
Methodology (IM)
- IM is based on annual review current economic
indicators and ongoing review by student aid
administrators
IM sensitive to disparity between parent and
student asset treatment
29How are assets treated?
- Parent and student assets taken into account
- Parental asset 5.6 assessment
- Student asset 35 assessment
- 529 Plans are parents assets
- Savings or pre-paid the same in IM
- Family assets to become the norm
30Aid Eligibility and Availability
- Income is the major influence
- Assets are considered but protected
- Saving and planning never more important
- Eligibility isnt a guarantee
- Few colleges can meet full need
- No college should be ruled out without pursuing
financial aid
31collegeboard.com
32Calculate your eligibility
- collegeboard.com tools
- EFC Calculators
- Federal Methodology and Institutional Methodology
- Twenty Things You Need To Know About College
Financing - Compare Your Aid Awards
- And much, much more!
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