1 / 32

Presented by: University Scholarships & Financial Aid Services (USFAS)

Money Matters: Part 1: Financial Aid Process for First Year Students. Presented by: University Scholarships & Financial Aid Services (USFAS). LEAVE THIS SPACE CLEAR. Money Matters Session Goals. Two part presentation: University Scholarships & Financial Aid Services (USFAS)

zahina
Download Presentation

Presented by: University Scholarships & Financial Aid Services (USFAS)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Money Matters:Part 1: Financial Aid Process for First Year Students Presented by: University Scholarships & Financial Aid Services (USFAS) LEAVE THIS SPACE CLEAR

  2. Money Matters Session Goals Two part presentation: • University Scholarships & Financial Aid Services (USFAS) Goal-Help you understand the financial aid process at USF, provide tools for your students to monitor their application and explain how they receive aid • University Controllers Office (Student Financial Services) Goal-Help you understand what your student owes, when and how to pay

  3. Agenda-Money Matters Part 1 • USFAS website to understand the financial aid process, policies and more… • Using OASIS to find answers and monitor your student’s financial aid status… • Florida Bright Futures • Deferments • Tools to help students budget for college costs

  4. Agenda-Money Matters Part 2 • Presented by Student Financial Services • Using OASIS to see what your student owes and how to pay the bill • Important Payment Information • How Financial Aid Pays Your Student’s Bill • Florida Pre-Paid

  5. www.usf.edu/finaid

  6. 2011-2012 Estimated Cost of Attendance (fall and spring) Based on 2010-2011 Costs Tuition……………………………………..............................................$5,200 (15 credit hours/semester) Room/Board…………………………………………………………………….…$9,000 Books……………………………………………………………………………….…$1,500 Personal……………………………………………………………………… …….$2,500 Transportation……………………………………………………………………$1,600 Total for Florida Residents………………………………………………….$19,800 Non-Resident Tuition Fee…………………………………………………..$10,810 Total for Non-Residents………………………………………………………$30,610 *Tuition rate is currently $170.80per credit hour plus $37 flat fee per semester *Non-resident fee is currently $531.11 per credit hour plus $37 flat fee per semester *Final tuition rates will be available late July 2011

  7. OASIS: Answers your student’s questions 24/7! www.usf.edu/oasis

  8. OASIS Main Menu

  9. Financial Aid Year Selection Menu Select the aid year you wish to view: 1011 for summer, 1112 for fall/spring

  10. Financial Aid Main Menu

  11. Florida Bright Futures Scholarships

  12. Florida Bright Futures New for 2011-2012! All Bright Futures recipients must complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) www.fafsa.gov

  13. Florida Bright Futures (continued) • Florida Academic Scholars- $101 per credit hour • Florida Medallion Scholarship- $76 per credit hour • Gold Seal Vocational Scholars- $76 per credit hour • Your student will receive Bright Futures even if they have other types of aid that pay tuition & fees, including Florida Pre-Paid plans

  14. Florida Bright Futures, continued Students must repay the university for any courses dropped or withdrawn from that were paid with Bright Futures funds

  15. Florida Bright Futures, continued • Example: Academic Scholars recipient • If student is registered for 15 credit hours; • Academic Scholars will pay (15x101=) $1,515; • If one 3 credit hour course is dropped, the student will owe USF (3x101=) $303; AND • Will not meet renewal requirements for the next school year until USF has been repaid

  16. Report Funds From Other Sources • Financial aid must be reduced if the student receives more aid than the cost of attendance • If your student expects funds not listed on the award notice, notify us immediately using the ‘Additional Resources’ tab in OASIS • Students will receive an email reminder in June

  17. Tuition & Fee Deferments

  18. Why a Tuition Deferment is Important • Tuition is due at the end of the fifth day of classes each term • Financial aid is paid on the sixth day of classes after your student’s enrollment is confirmed • Without a tuition deferment, the tuition payment would be late & the student’s classes would be cancelled

  19. Tuition Deferments Tuition Deferments for financial aid recipients • Automatically provided if the student has Bright Futures and/or a USF scholarship or if a FAFSA is on file by the deadline announced on the USFAS website • Prevents cancellation for non-payment • After registration, check OASIS; remember check each term • Temporarily prevents a late payment fee • Provides temporary extension to pay tuition

  20. Housing Deferments

  21. Housing Deferments • Automatically provided for in-state residents if the student has $4,750 in financial aid for the semester • Automatically provided for non-Florida residents if the student has $12,200 in financial aid for the semester • After your student receives their room assignment, check OASIS to see if the student qualifies • Allows your student to move in without paying the first month’s rent • Provides temporary extension to pay housing charges

  22. Meal plan Deferments

  23. Meal Plan Deferments • Automatically provided for in-state residents if the student has $6,875 in financial aid for the semester • Automatically provided for non-Florida residents if the student has $14,200 in financial aid for the semester • After your student receives their room assignment and has completed the meal plan contract, check OASIS to see if the student qualifies • If the student is eligible for the meal plan deferment, a $50 administrative fee is due by August 3, 2011, paid to USF Dining in MSC 1502 or online at www.usfdining.com • Provides temporary extension to pay meal plan charges for the semester

  24. Take 15!..credit hours each semester

  25. Did you know that…. • every semester a student extends their enrollment, he/she will be adding about $9,900 to the cost of their degrees!  • …if your student withdraws from one 3 hour course each semester, he/she will have to enroll for at least one more year at a cost of $20,000! • …in addition to the cost of the degree, your student will lose wages of $41,000 per year (median income for 2006 college graduates per the National Center for Educational Statistics). • …if your student completes two-thirds or less of the courses attempted, it will take two additional years to graduate and two years of lost wages.  The price tag:  $120,000! Talk with your student so they understand the financial implications before dropping a class!

  26. Things for your student to consider as they enroll in classes Staying eligible for aid means: • not enrolling in classes that are not needed for his/her degree program • having a 2.0 GPA by the time he/she is in junior standing • completing at least 67% of the courses in which he/she enroll • attaining a bachelor’s degree in less than 180 hours attempted FINISH WHAT THEY START!

  27. Impact of Enrollment Decisions • Repaying Bright Futures for dropped courses • Reaching the 120 credit hour limit on Bright Futures and not having a degree • Being able to enroll but losing aid for low completion ratio (67%) or low GPA (less than a 2.0) • Paying excess hours charges for credit hours attempted over 144 • Paying repeat course surcharges if a course is taken for a third time

  28. Be a Smart Borrower • Financial aid awards may include student loans which have: • Low interest rates • Deferred repayments • Borrow only what is needed! • Use our cost calculators!

  29. Cost Calculators Use our cost calculators to determine actual costs and budget wisely!

  30. Financial Literacy 101 • Required course for all first time college students • Complete the module before school starts in the fall • Access via BlackBoard-`Life Skills for Student Success’ • Designed to give students basic financial management information • Credit card use • Financial aid (including student loans) • Budgeting

  31. Next Steps • Make sure your student registers for classes! • Complete any outstanding unsatisfied financial aid requirements • Read and accept T&C and accept awards • Complete the online MPN & online Entrance Counseling if loans are accepted • Make sure your student pays close attention to emails and keep his/her email address current in OASIS • Sign up for eDeposit in OASIS • Notify UCO of 3rd party payments (others paying tuition on the student’s behalf) • Make sure the student pays his/her bill by the deadline if not receiving a deferment • Review this presentation on our website (www.usf.edu/finaid)

  32. THANK YOU!

More Related