Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Student Eligibility and The Application Process. BILL MACK.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Student Eligibility and The Application Process. BILL MACK."— Presentation transcript:

1 Student Eligibility and The Application Process

2 BILL MACK

3 Objective  Understand how to complete the FAFSA  Know the required elements of student eligibility for federal student financial aid

4 Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)  Required for federal student aid programs  Schools may not require an additional application for federal aid programs  Computes Expected Family Contribution  Database matches confirm eligibility as an eligible student

5 FAFSA  Multiple ways to complete the FAFSA  On the Web  Paper FAFSA  FAA Access  FAFSA on the Phone

6 FAFSA  FAFSA on the Web  English or Spanish  Real time submission  Electronic signatures  Pop up help  Pop up chat help

7 FAFSA  Skip logic  Edit Checks  On-line status update

8 FAFSA  Special Circumstances  Students may skip the parent questions if they feel they have a special circumstance

9 FAFSA  IRS Data Retrieval Tool (DRT)  Pulls IRS tax return data into the FAFSA  Can be used for the correction process  Relieves the student/parent from submitting a tax return transcript for verification  Not available for everyone (i.e. amended return)

10 FAFSA  Common Mistakes  Form is not signed  Wrong SSN  Wrong Name  Wrong Date of Birth  Putting parent income information in student section

11 FAFSA  How to sign the application  Password  Printed Signature Page  Sign rejected paper Student Aid Report (SAR)  School submits the signature through FAA Access (and keeps the documentation in the student’s file)

12 FAFSA  Signing the application:  Certifies the information is correct  Gives ED authority to verify the information with other agencies  Agrees to provide the school with requested documents  Certifies the student’s identity  Acknowledges consequences of false information  Agrees to certain application certification statements

13 Expected Family Contribution (EFC)  The amount a family can be reasonably be expected to contribute to a student’s annual cost of attendance.  The same at all schools  Calculated using a congressionally mandated formula

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

31

32

33

34 Student Eligibility  US Citizen or Eligible Non-Citizen  If required, be registered for Selective Service  Not be default on a federal debt  Not have exceeded aggregate borrowing limits  Not owe Title IV Refund  High School Graduate or equivalent

35 Student Eligibility  Not have been convicted of selling or possessing drugs while receiving federal student aid  Self reported on the FAFSA  Database match with the Department of Justice

36 Student Eligibility  Satisfactory Academic Progress (SAP)  Established by the individual schools  2.0 by the beginning of the junior year  No more than 150 percent of the program length.

37 Institutional Eligibility  May not admit as a regular student those who do not have a high school diploma or its recognized equivalent and  Who are below the age of compulsory secondary school attendance in the student in which the school is located

38 CPS Database Matches  SSN (for the student and the parents)  Department of Homeland Security  When the answer to the citizenship question is “eligible non-citizen”  Selective Service  For males over the age of 18  National Student Loan Data Service  Defaults  Overpayments  Aggregate borrowing limits

39 CPS Database Matches  Department of Defense  To identify students eligible for the Iraq/Afghanistan Grant  Department of Veteran Affairs  When the student claims on the FAFSA to be a veteran

40 Output  Student receives a Student Aid Report (SAR)  eMail  Paper  EFC  Comments (verification, database match failures)  Eligibility for Pell/Stafford Loan

41 Output  School receives a Institutional Student Information Report (ISIR)  EFC  Verification Code  “C” Code  Comment codes

42 Changes to the FAFSA  Corrections : Applicants may correct items entered incorrectly or originally estimated (Income, assets)  Updates : Year in school, Dependency Status (except for the student’s marital status)  Adjustments : Changes made by the school as the result of professional judgment (dependency, income, etc.)

43 Questions?


Download ppt "Student Eligibility and The Application Process. BILL MACK."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google