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Federal Work Study

Federal Work Study. Off-Campus Opportunities Charles W. Puls Boston College. Off-Campus FWS. Private, For-Profit Work Opportunities Non-Profit Work Opportunities Government Work Opportunities Mandated Work Opportunities Community Service Literacy Training

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Federal Work Study

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  1. Federal Work Study Off-Campus Opportunities Charles W. Puls Boston College

  2. Off-Campus FWS • Private, For-Profit Work Opportunities • Non-Profit Work Opportunities • Government Work Opportunities • Mandated Work Opportunities • Community Service • Literacy Training • Job Location and Development (JLD)

  3. Initial Considerations • The size of your FWS allocation. • The goals of your institution. • The size of your staff. • The size of the local community. • The nature of your student population.

  4. Common Elements1. Demonstrated Reliability • Reliable Organization/Agency • Professional Direction and Staff • Adequate Supervision • Work Opportunities Consistent with the FWS Program

  5. 2. Written Agreements • Hiring/Firing • Supervision • Liability • Employer of Record/Payroll • Non-federal Share of Wages • Social Security and Worker’s Comp. • Billing

  6. 3. FWS Knowledge Be sure the agency is informed

  7. For-Profit Agencies • Subsidy rate may not exceed 50% • No more than 25% of FWS allocation • Academic relevance

  8. Non-Profit/Government Agencies • Non-profit/tax exempt status • 75% federal share • 90% federal share option • Proprietary schools may only use for community service • Public interest

  9. Not Public Interest If: • primarily benefits members of an organization with membership limits • partisan or nonpartisan political activity/ association with a faction in an election • work for an elected official • political aide for an elected official • political affiliation is a hiring factor • lobbying

  10. Community Service Beginning 2000-2001, must spend 7% of FWS allocation

  11. Community Service Definition • such fields as health care, child care, literacy training, education, welfare, social services, transportation, housing and neighborhood improvement, public safety, crime prevention and control, recreation, rural development, and community improvement; • work in service opportunities or youth corps as defined in Section 101 of the National and Community Service Act of 1990, and service in the agencies, institutions, and activities designated in Section 124(a) of that Act; • support for students with disabilities; • and activities in which a FWS student serves as a mentor for such purposes as: • tutoring • supporting educational and recreational activities, and • counseling, including career counseling

  12. Literacy Training Definitions Reading Tutor: Direct tutoring to pre-school/elementary school students. Family Literacy Services to families with preschool age Project: children or children who are in elementary school. Family Literacy Reasonable flexibility for institutions to Activities: determine family literacy activities in a family literacy project.

  13. Literacy training • 100% subsidy rate • Literacy Project Required ABC

  14. Establishing a Community Service Program 1. Determine if any on-campus jobs meet the definition 2. Determine if any current off-campus jobs meet the definition 3. Locate other potential employers * The Yellow Pages * Chamber of Commerce * Volunteer/Career Services Center * Department of Education * Commissions for National and Community Service

  15. FWS Community ServiceDetermining Expenditure Goals School’s Total FWS Allocation . . . $440,000 Required CS Expenditure (7%). . . $30,800 Gross wages needed to reach expenditure: $30,800  75% = $41,066 TARGET!!

  16. FWS Community ServiceDetermining Expenditure Goals Target Expenditure = $41,066 Total FWS eligibility that should be awarded: $41,066  80% = $51,322 Number of students that should be placed in CS jobs: $51,322  $2200 = 24

  17. FISAP Reporting Part V, Section H: Community Service #24. Number of students in community service requirement 4 #25. Federal share of community service earned compensation $6,000 #26. Non-federal share of community service earned compensation $2,000 Part V, Section I: Literacy Activities #27. Number of students employed as FWS reading tutors of children 10 #28. Federal share of earned compensation for FWS reading tutors of children $1,000 #29. Total earned compensation for FWS reading tutors of children $1,000

  18. Job Location and Development JLD Background Funding a JLD Program • 80% Federal Funds* • 20% Institutional Funds *Allowable to use up to 10% or $50,000 (whichever is less) of total Federal Work Study Allocation

  19. Reporting JLDFISAP Part V, Section D #15. Federal share of JLD program expenditures $48,000 Part V, Section G #20. Total expenditures for the Job Location and Development program $60,000 #21. Institutional expenditures for the JLD program $12,000 #22. Number of students for whom jobs were located or developed 95 #23. Total Earnings of the students in line 22 above $67,432

  20. Promoting an Off-Campus Program Students • Develop materials to market community services directly to FWS eligible students • Ask to present at various organization’s meetings Employers • Engage in networking activities • Stay in touch Both • Hold and attend job fairs • Host an “open house”

  21. The Key to Success... Maintain Good Employer Relations! • Make Initial Contact • Follow-up On Your Contacts!!! • Learn employers’ needs, and appeal to those needs

  22. National Student Employment Association (NSEA)andNortheastern Association of Student Employment Administrators (NEASEA) • nseastudemp.org (there’s no www)

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