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What You Need to Know About Financial Aid

What You Need to Know About Financial Aid. Office of Student Financial Aid Montgomery College. Topics We Will Discuss…. What is Financial Aid Cost of Attendance Expected Family Contribution Determining Financial Need Sources and Types of Financial Aid

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What You Need to Know About Financial Aid

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  1. What You Need to Know About Financial Aid Office of Student Financial Aid Montgomery College

  2. Topics We Will Discuss… • What is Financial Aid • Cost of Attendance • Expected Family Contribution • Determining Financial Need • Sources and Types of Financial Aid • Free Application for Federal Student Aid • Follow-up Steps/Resources • Questions & Answers

  3. What is Financial Aid? Financial aid is funds provided to students and families to help pay for postsecondary educational expenses.

  4. What is Cost of Attendance (COA)? • Tuition and fees • Room and board • Books and supplies • Transportation • Miscellaneous personal expenses • Costs will widely vary from college to college

  5. What is Expected Family Contribution (EFC)? • Amount family can reasonably be expected to contribute • Two components • Parent contribution • Student contribution • Calculated using data from a federal application form and a federal methodology • Stays the same regardless of college

  6. What is Financial Need? Cost of Attendance (COA) –Expected Family Contribution (EFC) = Financial Need (Eligibility)

  7. Need and Eligibility Depend on Cost Private 4-year COA $42,979 - EFC $12,000 = Need $30,979 Public 4-year COA $22,953 - EFC $ 12,000 = Need $ 10,953 Public 2-year COA $16,068 - EFC $12,000 = Need $ 4,068

  8. Types of Financial Aid

  9. Grants • Money that does not have to be paid back • Usually awarded on the basis of financial need

  10. Scholarships • Money that does not have to be paid back • Awarded on the basis of merit, skill or unique characteristic

  11. Employment • Program provides student with employment • Earned while attending school • Money does not have to be repaid

  12. Loans • Money students and parents borrow to help pay college expenses • Repayment usually begins after education is finished or when enrollment falls below required enrollment status • Only borrow what is really needed • Look at loans as an investment in your future

  13. Sources of Financial Aid

  14. Federal Government • Largest source of financial aid • Aid awarded primarily on the basis of financial need • Must apply every year, beginning in the student’s senior year of high school, using the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)

  15. Federal Government Check basic eligibility requirements: • Be a U.S. citizen or eligible non-citizen • Have a valid Social Security number • Comply with Selective Service registration, if required (www.sss.gov for more information) • Have a high school diploma, a General Educational Development (GED) Certificate or pass an approved ability-to-benefit (ATB) test • Be working toward a degree or certificate in an eligible program at a school that participates in the federal student aid programs • Maintain satisfactory academic progress once in school

  16. Federal Government Programs • Federal Pell Grant • Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant • Teacher Education Assistance for College & Higher Education Grant • Federal Work Study • Federal Perkins Loan • Federal Direct Loans (Stafford subsidized & unsubsidized) • Federal Direct PLUS Loan

  17. Federal Grant Programs • Federal Pell Grant • Available for undergraduate students • Need-based grant • Awards up to $5,550 (2010-2011) • Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant • For undergraduate students with exceptional financial need • Priority given to Pell Grant recipients • $100-$4,000

  18. Federal Grant Programs • Teacher Education Assistance for College & Higher Education Grant (TEACH) • Available to students who intend to teach in a high need field (Bilingual Ed., Foreign Language, Math, Science, Special Ed.) • Must agree to serve as a full-time teacher in a public or private elementary or secondary school that serves low-income students • Must commit to teach for four academic years • Failure to complete service obligation converts grant into unsubsidized student loan • Grants of up to $4,000 per academic year

  19. Federal Work-Study • Money earned while attending school • Does not have to be repaid • For undergraduate and graduate students • Jobs can be on campus or off campus • Students are paid at least federal minimum wage

  20. Federal Perkins Loan • Undergraduate students can borrow up to $5,500 • 9-month grace period; repayment period up to 10 years • Deferment and cancellation provisions for teaching, nursing, law enforcement, etc. • Priority given to those with exceptional need • Eligibility for Federal Pell Grant is determined first

  21. Federal Direct Loans • Subsidized Stafford (Need-based) • Unsubsidized Stafford (Not need-based) • Annual and aggregate loan limits • 6-month grace period, repayment period varies from 10-25 years • Not credit-based

  22. Federal Direct Loans-Annual & Aggregate Borrowing Limits –

  23. Federal Direct PLUS Loan • Parents of dependent undergraduate students • Approval subject to credit status check • Loan Limits • Annual: COA less all other aid • Not need-based

  24. Federal Loans - Interest Rates • Perkins - 5% • Subsidized Stafford - • 2010-2011 4.5% • 2011-2012 3.4% • Unsubsidized Stafford - 6.8% • Direct PLUS Loan - 7.9%

  25. Financial Aid Process FAFSA4caster PIN FAFSA Worksheet SAR Verification Follow-up

  26. Pre-FAFSA Tasks • Get information about financial aid programs • Apply for a Federal Student Aid PIN (student & parent) www.pin.ed.gov • Collect financial documents to complete FAFSA (income tax return, W-2 form, other records of income). Full list of what you need is at www.fafsa.ed.gov • FAFSA on the Web Worksheet • FAFSA4caster - www.fafsa4caster.ed.gov • Early estimate of EFC

  27. PIN Website

  28. FAFSA on the Web Worksheet • Used as “pre-application” worksheet • Questions follow order of FAFSA on the Web • 4-page booklet containing: • Instructions • 4 sections

  29. FOTW Worksheet – Section 1 General Student Information: • Name • Social Security Number • Citizenship • Marital Status • Selective Service Registration • Drug Conviction Status • Parent’s Educational Background

  30. FOTW Worksheet – Section 2 Student Dependency Status • If all “No” responses, student is dependent • If “Yes” to any question, student is independent

  31. FOTW Worksheet – Section 3 Parent Information • Social Security Number • Name • Date of Birth • Dislocated Worker Status

  32. FOTW Worksheet – Section 3 Financial data for parents of dependent students: • Tax filing status • Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) for 2010 • Income earned from work • Receipt of benefits from certain federal means-tested programs • Additional financial information • Untaxed income

  33. FOTW Worksheet – Section 4 Financial data for student (and spouse): • Tax filing status • Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) for 2010 • Income earned from work • Dislocated worker status • Receipt of benefits from certain federal means-tested programs • Additional financial information • Untaxed income

  34. FOTW Worksheet – Additional Information A student may be asked to provide more information about: • Parent’s assets and net worth • Student’s assets and net worth

  35. Filing out a FAFSA – www.fafsa.gov

  36. Post-FAFSA Tasks • Receive a Student Aid Report (SAR) • SAR contains EFC • Review SAR and make corrections if needed • Use PIN to make corrections • Corrections to estimated income • Add/Delete school codes • Follow-up with schools • Verification process • Additional documents may be required • Communicate special circumstances to the school

  37. State Government • Residency requirements • Awards based on merit and need • Deadlines vary by state; check paper FAFSA or FAFSA on the web • Use the information on the FAFSA

  38. Maryland Maryland Higher Education Commission • State deadline: March 1st • Maryland has financial aid programs based on financial need, merit or career track • State aid may be used at public and private colleges/universities (primarily in MD)

  39. Maryland Need based programs: • Howard P. Rawlings • Educational Assistance Grant • Annual award $400-$3,000 • Guaranteed Access Grant • Annual award $400-$13,700 • Part-time Grant • Annual award $200-$2,000

  40. Maryland Legislative Scholarships: • Senatorial Scholarships • Award amount varies • Contact Senator for application • Delegate Scholarships • Award amount varies • Contact Delegate for application

  41. Maryland Unique Major • Funds awarded for the Senatorial and Delegate scholarships may be used at an out-of-state institution if the student’s academic program is not offered at a Maryland institution • Review website for more information on how to apply www.mhec.state.md.us

  42. Maryland Additional resources and information College 411: Student Guide An Academic Year: Preparing for College

  43. Institutional Aid Programs • Colleges offer their own grants and scholarships • Need-based and merit-based programs • Academic, athletic, and other talent-based scholarships and grants • Institutional aid may be for only the fist year or renewable for subsequent years • Contact the school’s admissions and financial aid office for applications and deadlines UNIVERSITY

  44. Private Sources of Student Aid • Private businesses • Political and advocacy organizations • Religious and social organizations • Parent and student’s place of employment • Foundations • Unions • Deadlines and application procedures vary widely • Begin researching private aid sources early

  45. Private Sources of Student Aid • Internet Scholarship Searches • Provide a student profile • Receive scholarship information • Contact scholarship providers directly • Scholarship Websites • www.collegeboard.com/paying • www.fastweb.com • www.collegequest.com • www.finaid.org • www.freescholarships.com • www.salliemae.com/scholarships • www.college-scholarships.com

  46. CSS/Financial Aid Profile • Financial aid application service of The College Board • Used to award private grant & scholarship funds • Check for a listing of participating institutions/ scholarship programs • www.collegeboard.com

  47. Deadlines are Important!!! • Financial aid forms and applications are just like homework; you have to turn them in correctly and on time • Schools have different deadlines for admissions and financial aid; research each school to find out the deadlines

  48. Be Careful!!!!! • Filling out FAFSA is free!!! • Avoid scholarship scams • Exclusive scholarship information • Scholarship guaranteed! • You’ve been selected! • Application fees • Free seminar or candidate interview

  49. Where do I go from here? • High school guidance office or college/career center • Books • The Scholarship Book • The College Blue Book: Scholarships, Fellowships, Grants and Loans • Peterson’s Scholarships, Grants and Prizes • College Board Scholarship Handbook

  50. College Goal Sunday What: • Receive free help to complete FAFSA When: • Sunday, February 13, 2011 • 2-4pm • Snow Date: February 20, 2011 Same time & location Where: • Montgomery College • Takoma Park/Silver Spring Campus • Charlene R. Nunley Student Service Center For more information: www.CollegeGoalSundayMD.org

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