SAP SATISFACTORY ACADEMIC PROGRESS PASFAA CONFERENCE OCTOBER, 2014 - LANCASTER, PA.

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Presentation transcript:

SAP SATISFACTORY ACADEMIC PROGRESS PASFAA CONFERENCE OCTOBER, LANCASTER, PA

SAP PANEL Sue Bloom Assistant Director of Financial Aid – Thiel College Greg Gearhart Director of Financial Aid – Messiah College Rhonda Moore Director of Financial Aid – Walnut Hill College Judy Schneider FAS Senior Consultant

PASFAA CONFERENCE Presentation Overview Satisfactory Academic Progress Policy (SAP) SAP regulations were re-written in Satisfactory Progress Definitions Grades and Pace of Completion Financial Aid Warning Appeals, probation, and academic plans Re-establishing aid eligibility

SAP POLICY To be eligible for Federal Student Aid funds, a student must make Satisfactory Academic Progress; and, your school must have a reasonable policy for monitoring that progress. The Department considers a Satisfactory Academic Progress policy to be reasonable if it meets both the qualitative and quantitative (Pace) criteria.

SAP POLICY Your school’s SAP policy must be as strict as your SAP policy for students enrolled in the same program of study who are not receiving FSA funds at your school. Applies to all students within categories: full-time, part-time, undergraduate, graduate You can have different policies for different categories of students. For example, one policy for undergraduate students and a different policy for graduate students.

SAP POLICY SAP policy must require an evaluation at the end of each payment period for programs lasting one year or less. For other programs, the policy must require annual reviews and correspond with the end of a payment period, but the school has the option of evaluating SAP at the end of each payment period, and many do.

SAP DEFINITIONS Financial Aid Warning A status a school assigns to a student who is failing to make Satisfactory Academic Progress School reinstates eligibility for aid for one payment period and may do so without a student appeal Warning status may only be used by schools that check SAP at the end of each payment period and for students who were making SAP in the prior period

SATISFACTORY PROGRESS DEFINITIONS Appeal A process by which a student who is not meeting SAP standards petitions the school for re-consideration of his/her eligibility for FSA funds. An appeal can include an academic plan (addressed later in the presentation).

SAP DEFINITIONS Financial Aid Probation A status a school assigns to a student who is failing to make Satisfactory Academic Progress and who successfully appeals. Eligibility for aid may be reinstated for one payment period.

SAP DEFINITIONS Maximum Timeframe Undergraduate program measured in credit hours: A period no longer than 150 percent of the published length of the program measured by the cumulative number of credit hours required to complete the program. Undergraduate program measured in clock hours: A period no longer than 150 percent of the published length of the programs as measured by the cumulative number of clock hours required to complete and expressed in calendar time.

SAP DEFINITIONS Maximum Timeframe – continued For a graduate program, a period the school defines that is based on the length of the program. Use of credit hours is also an option for graduate programs.

GRADES AND PACE OF COMPLETION Your SAP policy must specify the qualitative standard (grad point average) that a student must have at each evaluation or, if GPA is not an appropriate qualitative measure, a comparable measure against a norm.

GRADES AND PACE OF COMPLETION Your SAP policy must also specify the quantitative standard (pace) at which students must progress through their program to ensure that they will graduate within the maximum timeframe, and each academic progress check must measure this.

FINANCIAL AID WARNING Only schools that check satisfactory progress at the end of each payment period may place students on financial aid warning as a consequence of not making satisfactory progress. A school may use this status without appeal or any other action by the student.

APPEALS, FINANCIAL AID PROBATION, AND ACADEMIC PLAN Probation If, by the end of the warning semester, the student is not able to achieve Satisfactory Academic Progress status, the student will not be able to receive financial aid for the next period of enrollment unless the student successfully appeals.

APPEALS, FINANCIAL AID PROBATION, AND ACADEMIC PLAN Appeal Satisfactory Academic Progress requirements can be appealed based on certain circumstances, such as: Death of a relative Student injury or illness Other special circumstance.

APPEALS, FINANCIAL AID PROBATION, AND ACADEMIC PLAN The student’s appeal must include: An explanation of why the student failed to make Satisfactory Academic Progress - explain how the circumstance prevented the student from performing up to potential. A description of what has changed that will allow the student to achieve Satisfactory Academic Progress status after the probationary semester.

APPEALS, FINANCIAL AID PROBATION, AND ACADEMIC PLAN Academic Plan A part of the appeal process can be the establishment of an academic plan designed to help the student regain Satisfactory Academic Progress standing. The academic plan would most likely be worked out between the student, his or her academic advisor, and/or the Registrars’ Office. The academic plan is not required at the start of the probationary semester. But, if the student fails to regain Satisfactory Academic Progress status at the end of the probationary semester, the student must be successfully following the academic plan in order to continue to receive financial aid. The academic plan must define how the student can regain Satisfactory Academic Progress status by a specific point in time.

REESTABLISHING AID ELIGIBILITY Your SAP policy, even if it does not permit appeals, must explain how students who are not making Satisfactory Academic Progress can restore their eligibility for FSA funds.

INPUT Discussion Your best student story for why SAP was not achieved? Questions Recommendations Suggestions Thank you,