1 / 44

Financial Aid 101

Financial Aid 101. 2014. Super FAFSA Week. What You Need to Know About the College Financial Aid Process. Sponsored by the Virginia Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators and Funded in part by the College Access Challenge Grant Program. Topics. What is Financial Aid?

jacob-gross
Download Presentation

Financial Aid 101

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. Financial Aid 101 2014 Super FAFSA Week What You Need to Know About the College Financial Aid Process Sponsored by the Virginia Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators and Funded in part by the College Access Challenge Grant Program

  2. Topics • What is Financial Aid? • Need Components • Types of Aid • Applying for Aid • Dependency Status and Parents • Effect of Outside Aid • Change in Circumstances • What’s Next?

  3. What is financial aid? • Financial aid consists of funds provided to students and their families to help pay for postsecondary education. • Financial aid helps to bridge the gap between the Cost of Attendance and the Expected Family Contribution.

  4. What is Cost of Attendance (COA)? Varies based on the school

  5. What is Expected Family Contribution (EFC)? • Amount a family can reasonably be expected to contribute • Two Components • Parent Contribution + Student Contribution • Calculated using data from the FAFSA • Does not change based on the school

  6. Financial Need Calculation

  7. Where does financial aid come from? • Federal government • State government • College/University • Private sources

  8. Types of Financial Aid • Scholarships • Grants • Work-study • Loans

  9. Scholarships • Money that does not have to be paid back • Usually based on merit, skill, a unique characteristic, and/or need • Sources • Civic organizations, churches, employers, schools • Free online web searches • www.fastweb.com • https://bigfuture.collegeboard.org/scholarship-search • CAUTION – Beware of scams • http://www.finaid.org/scholarships/protecting.phtml

  10. Grants • Money that does not have to be paid back, some may require an “agreement to serve” after graduation • Typically based on financial need • Federal Grants • Federal Pell Grant, Federal Supplemental Education Opportunity Grant (FSEOG), Teacher Education Assistance for College and Higher Education Grant (TEACH) • State Grants • Virginia Guaranteed Assistance Program, Commonwealth Award, Virginia Tuition Assistance Grant

  11. Work-study • Allows student to earn money to help pay for college costs • On and off-campus jobs available • Paid by: • Paycheck • Credit to student account • Non-monetary compensation Example: Room and Board (resident assistants) • Not all colleges participate

  12. Loans • Money that is borrowed to finance educational costs, which must be repaid • Borrower - Student and/or Parent • Repayment • Student - After graduating or dropping below half-time enrollment • Parent - Typically 60 days after the first disbursement or can request deferment while student is enrolled at least half-time (interest accrues while deferred) • Repayment terms and options vary for students and parents

  13. Loans Common Federal Loan Programs • Federal Perkins Loan – fixed 5% interest rate • Federal Direct Student Loan • Subsidized – fixed 3.86% interest rate, interest does not accrue while in school, based on need • Unsubsidized – fixed 3.86% interest rate, interest accrues while in school, but does not require in-school repayment on interest, not based on need • Federal Parent PLUS Loan – fixed 6.41% interest rate, one parent borrower, good credit history

  14. FAFSA Process Complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) each year. • Available January 1 of each year at www.fafsa.gov • Check with colleges for any priority deadlines • File electronically for faster processing and online tracking • Collects demographic and financial information • If “Will File”, you can provide estimated tax information, but will need to update once taxes have been filed • Information collected is used to determine EFC • Apply for PIN (Personal Identification Number) • Student and parent sign with their own PIN

  15. PIN Process • Student and parent each apply for a personal identification number (PIN) at www.pin.ed.gov • Can be requested at any time, even real-time as the student completes the online FAFSA • Must have PIN to electronically sign the FAFSA • PIN can be used to sign loan master promissory note (MPN)

  16. General Student Criteria • U.S. citizen or eligible non-citizen • Registered with Selective Service (males) • Valid Social Security Number (SSN) • High school diploma, GED, or homeschooling credential • Enrolled or accepted in an eligible degree or certificate program • Criminal convictions (including drug convictions) may limit eligibility, depends on the conviction and type of institution

  17. Dependency Status FAFSA will ask a series of questions to determine if the student is dependent or independent, including: • 24 years or older • Married • Master’s or doctorate degree program • Military service – Active or Veteran • Children and/or dependents, provide half of support • Foster care, deceased parents, dependent or ward of court, emancipated minor or legal guardianship, homeless * If all “No” answers, student is dependent. * If “Yes” to any question, student is independent.

  18. Who is the ‘parent’? • Biological parents information or adoptive parents should be provided on the FAFSA • Grandparents, legal guardians, foster parents, older brothers or sisters, and uncles or aunts are not considered parents on the FAFSA unless they have legally adopted the student • Possible dependency override in certain circumstances – rare, but speak with a financial aid administrator

  19. Which parent? In cases of divorce or separation: • Whom did the student live with the most during the past 12 months? • If neither or both, who provided the most financial support? • Example: Who paid for health or car insurance?

  20. Household Size • Student • Parents • Dependents • Others who live with you and you are providing more than half of their support and will continue to provide from July 1 – June 30

  21. Errors can be costly! • Read instructions and complete carefully! Incorrect or missing information may delay the process and result in loss of financial aid • Most Common Errors • Social Security Numbers • Divorced/remarried parental information • Income earned/paid and untaxed income • Household size and number of household members in college • Real estate and investment net worth

  22. IRS Data Retrieval Tool (DRT) • Applicants have the option to transfer IRS tax data into their FAFSA using the DRT • DRT allows the applicant to file more quickly and accurately, saving up to 8 weeks • File taxes electronically and early, then file your FAFSA using the IRS DRT after 10-14 days • Not eligible for IRS DRT? • Complete based on 2013 tax return and order an IRS transcript of any 2013 tax returns filed at www.irs.gov

  23. Verification • At least one in three applications may be selected by a school • Did not use the IRS DRT and are selected for verification? You must submit an IRS Transcript • Contact your financial aid office about any other documentation needed for the verification process • Financial aid cannot be released to a student’s account until this step is completed

  24. Role of the College Financial Aid Office • Assists students and their families in understanding and utilizing financial aid resources • Determines federal and state aid eligibility • Verifies FAFSA information • Reviews special circumstances • Packages financial aid depending on fund availability • Sends award notification (electronic or paper) with award amounts, disbursement methods, timeframes, and any terms and conditions of each award

  25. Outside aid vs. Award package • Notify school of all outside/private scholarships and grants • Could result in a change to need-based aid if the outside aid causes you to exceed your financial need or COA

  26. Student Aid Example

  27. Student Aid Example, Cont. • Since the student submitted a letter to the Financial Aid Office confirming an additional $6,000 in outside aid, the Financial Aid Office must reduce other aid to keep the student within their $24,000 cost of attendance • Typically schools will reduce loans first since they require repayment • A revised award notice will be sent to the student

  28. Change in Circumstances • Loss of income or benefit • Death of a parent • Parent divorced or separated after FAFSA is filed • Unusually high medical expenses paid but not reimbursed by insurance You may be eligible for adjustment based on professional judgment - speak with your financial aid administrator

  29. What’s Next? • After FAFSA processing, student will receive a Student Aid Report (SAR) via link in email if student provided valid email address or paper by mail if no valid email address provided • Review SAR comments and check for accuracy • Remember to update any estimated information • Make sure you meet all admissions and financial aid deadlines. Check each school’s website for details • Submit any requested documents • Search and apply for other sources of aid, such as private scholarships and grants

  30. Summary • Start the process early • Know any and all deadlines • Know what information and forms you need • Provide accurate information • Make and save copies of everything • Follow up: typical processing times are 4-6 weeks • Check your email regularly • If you have a question – ASK!

  31. Questions? Good Luck and Thank You for participating in VASFAA’s Super FAFSA Week !

  32. Helping the Helpers – What the FAFSA Looks Like • The next few slides will be a series of screen shots from the FAFSA to familiarize you with what you will see when helping students • Primary difficulty in FAFSA is that it is an overwhelming lot of questions • Take your time and read through • Attention to details

  33. Most students will start here. If they have already begun this year’s FAFSA, they will go to the Login option

  34. This is where students will go if they have filed a FAFSA in a prior year This is where students will go if they have never filed a FAFSA This option is available for a student who has forgotten his or her PIN

  35. This is what the page will look like if you have an active PIN

  36. This is what the page will look like if you DO NOT have an active PIN

  37. Demographic and Student Information • The next several pages will collect basic information about the student • These will be items the student will know such as: • Name, address, etc. • Education level of parents • Schools he or she wishes to have the FAFSA send to

  38. After general student data, students will reach the dependency determination page. If the student is not able to answer “yes” to any of these questions, he or she will be considered a dependent student. This will mean that he or she will be required to provide parent data This is true EVEN IF the parent does not support the student financially or does not claim him or her on taxes

  39. Tax Information The following slides show some of the FAFSA questions that request tax information. Here are some examples of what these pages look like and how to help the student complete these portions of the FAFSA

  40. The questions in this section of the page ask for the dollar amounts of specific items from tax information The help and hints box is VERY IMPORTANT! It tells EXACTLY where to find each item in your tax documents.

  41. This is what the income information looks like if the student did not work or did not make enough money to be required to file taxes.

  42. On the last page, if the student has a PIN, it will look like this. The parent section will look similar.

  43. What to do if the student has no PIN FAFSA will give these options to a student who does not wish to sign with a PIN. While this is not recommended, it is an option available to students who have had difficulty getting a PIN or have not yet tried. They may print the signature page and mail it in to FAFSA, or submit the FAFSA without a signature. IF IT IS SUBMITTED WITHOUT A PIN SIGNATURE, IT WILL NOT SEND AN EFC RESULT TO THE SCHOOL. IT IS IMPERATIVE TO STRESS THE IMPORTANCE OF COMING BACK AND SIGNING OR MAILING IN THE SIGNATURE PAGE SO THAT STUDENTS MAY GET FINANCIAL AID AWARDS FROM SCHOOLS.

More Related