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FINANCING YOUR HIGHER EDUCATION

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Title: FINANCING YOUR HIGHER EDUCATION


1

Timothy A. Connell, President
2
Overview of GSFC
  • Who we are
  • What we do
  • GAcollege411 website
  • HOPE
  • Q A

3
Our Mission
  • The mission of the Georgia Student Finance
    Commission, is to promote and increase access to
    education beyond high school for Georgians.

4
GSFC is
  • An agency of the State of Georgia
  • Responsible for administering state and lottery
    funded financial aid
  • A provider of scholarships, grants, education
    loans, and loan guarantees

5
Since 1965, GSFC has
  • Helped 2 million Georgians attend college
  • Administered more than 9.6 billion in financial
    aid, including
  • - 4.5 billion in loan guarantees
  • - 1 billion in Stafford and PLUS loans
  • - 600 million through scholarship
  • and grant programs other than HOPE
  • - Nearly 3.5 BILLION in HOPE
  • Scholarships and Grants

6
GSFC programs847 million in FY 2006
7
  • Scholarships and Grants
  • (other than HOPE)

8
Scholarships and grants29.5 million in FY 2006
9
Scholarships and grants
  • Georgia Tuition Equalization Grant
  • Governor's Scholarship
  • Georgia's HERO Scholarship
  • LEAP (Leveraging Educational Assistance
    Partnership)
  • Robert C. Byrd Honors Scholarship

10
Scholarships and grants(continued)
  • North Georgia College and State University Grant
  • Law Enforcement Personnel Dependents Grant
  • Public Safety Memorial Grant
  • Charles McDaniel Teacher Scholarship

11
Scholarships and grants
  • Tuition Equalization Grant
  • - Began in 1972
  • - Students attending private college
  • - 1,000 per year
  • - Four years of undergraduate studies
  • - No academic requirement
  • - 30,000 students served annually

12
Scholarships and grants
  • Governors Scholarship
  • - High school seniors who are Valedictorians
  • and STAR students
  • - Enrolled in a public or private college in
  • Georgia
  • - 900 per year
  • - Four years of undergraduate studies
  • - Must maintain 3.0 GPA

13
Scholarships and grants
  • HERO Scholarship
  • - Soldiers serving in Guard and Reserves
  • - 181 days in combat zone (After May 3 2005)
  • - Georgia public or private college
  • - 2,000 per year
  • - Four years of undergraduate studies
  • - Children also eligible
  • - 273 recipients, 490,000 this year

14
  • Federal Education Loans

15
FFELP education loans55.5 million in FY 2006
16
Federal education loans
  • Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP)
  • - Subsidized Federal Stafford loans
  • - Unsubsidized Federal Stafford loans
  • - PLUS loans

17
Federal education loans
  • Subsidized Federal Stafford loans
  • - Made to students
  • - Federal government pays interest while
  • student is in school
  • - Need-based loans
  • - Non-credit based
  • - Amount varies, to aggregate of 23,000
  • - 6.8 interest rate

18
Federal education loans
  • Unsubsidized Federal Stafford loans
  • - Made to students
  • - Student pays interest, even in school
  • - Not need-based
  • - Non-credit based
  • - Amount varies, to aggregate of 23,000
  • - 6.8 interest rate

19
Federal education loans
  • PLUS loans
  • - Made to parents of dependent students
  • - Repayment begins 30 days after
  • disbursement
  • - Not need based
  • - Credit Based
  • - Borrow up to cost of attendance, less
  • other aid received
  • - 8.5 interest rate

20
State education loans
  • Service cancelable loans

21
Service cancelable loans15 million in FY 2006
22
Service cancelable loans
  • State and lottery funded
  • Address Georgias critical-needs such as
    teaching and nursing, and other public service
    such as military
  • Repayment through service or cash
  • Typically pays 2,500 per year
  • One year service repays one year of loan
  • 85 repay through service

23
Service cancelable loans
  • PROMISE Teacher Scholarship Loan
  • HOPE Teacher Scholarship Loan
  • Destination Teaching
  • NE Georgia Health Systems Nurse
  • Registered Nurse
  • Nursing Faculty

24
Service cancelable loans(continued)
  • North Georgia College State University Military
    Scholarship Loan
  • Georgia Military College State Service
    Scholarship Loan
  • Georgia National Guard Service Loan
  • Scholarship for Engineering Education
  • Careers in Social Work

25
Service cancelable loans
  • PROMISE Teacher Scholarship Loan
  • - Helps students pursue undergraduate
  • degree in teaching
  • - Students who have completed freshmen
  • and sophomore years with 3.0 GPA
  • - 3,000 junior year, 3,000 senior year
  • - Must maintain 3.0 GPA
  • - Repay 1,500 per year of teaching in
  • public school

26
Service cancelable loans
  • HOPE Teacher Scholarship Loan
  • - Helps individuals (primarily teachers) with
  • degrees pursue advanced degrees in
  • critical teaching fields
  • - Masters, Specialist, Doctorate
  • - Up to 10,000
  • - Repay 2,500 per year of teaching in
  • public school in critical need area

27
  • Federal Loan Guaranty Services

28
Education loan guarantees307.5 million in FY
2006
29
Loan guaranty services
  • Federal guaranty enables private lenders to make
    education loans
  • GSFC is one of 34 federal guarantors in nation
  • Only Georgia-based federal guarantor
  • GSFC guarantees the loans we make
  • We also guarantee education loans made by 23
    other lenders

30
Loan guaranty services(continued)
  • Campus-based PEER financial literacy program (18
    campuses)
  • We promote responsible borrowing to prevent and
    rehabilitate defaults
  • We work closely with borrowers to repair their
    credit through rehabilitation

31
  • Outreach and Training

32
Outreach and training
  • Professional development for counselors and
    financial aid officers
  • Workshops and free financial aid consultations
    for students and parents
  • Participate in PROBE Fairs and other college
    fairs and career days
  • Last year provided outreach to more than 250,000
    Georgians
  • College Goal Sunday, February 18 (12 sites)

33
  • GAcollege411.org
  • Helping students
  • plan, apply, and pay for college.

34
GAcollege411
  • Major objectives
  • - Provide a free, one-stop, online resource
  • - Enable students to plan for college,
  • compare Georgia colleges, find financial
  • aid, apply online
  • - Enable students to explore at own pace
  • - Provide a valuable tool to support high
  • school counselors and parents

35
GAcollege411.org
36
Getting Started
  • My411 accounts
  • - Free, password protected
  • - Gives students access to all site
  • features
  • - Enables students to record and
  • organize progress toward preparing
  • for college

37
GAcollege411
  • Career Info
  • - Information on hundreds of careers
  • - Match specific careers to individual
  • skills and interests
  • - Identifies current high-demand, low-
  • demand careers in Georgia

38
GAcollege411
  • Student Planner
  • - Tutorials, practice tests, and study
  • guides help students prepare for SAT,
  • ACT, and other exams
  • - Student Planner Timeline
  • - Portfolio matches students high school
  • achievements with college requirements

39
GAcollege411
  • GA College
  • - Compare over a hundred Georgia
  • colleges and technical colleges
  • - Virtual tours of campuses
  • - Rank colleges by students criteria

40
GAcollege411
  • Applications and Transcripts
  • - Apply for college admission online
  • (89 of 105 HOPE-eligible schools)
  • - Apply for financial aid online
  • - Later this year, send transcripts
  • electronically

41
GAcollege411
  • Paying for College
  • - State and federal financial aid
  • resources
  • - Official source of information for all
  • GSFC programs
  • - Basics of responsible borrowing

42
GAcollege411
  • GA College Savings Plan
  • - Begin saving for college early
  • - All about Georgias 529 Plan
  • - Administered by Office of Treasury
  • and Fiscal Services
  • - Currently more than 75,000 accounts with
  • over 460 million in assets

43
GAcollege411
  • Adult Learner
  • - Getting the GED
  • - Strategies for returning to college,
  • transferring to another college
  • - Information about distance learning,
  • e-learning opportunities
  • - Advice on changing careers

44
GAcollege411 Partners
  • Georgia Department of Education
  • University System of Georgia
  • Department of Technical Adult Education
  • Foundation for Independent Colleges
  • School Counselors Association
  • Professional Standards Commission
  • Public Library Service
  • Office of Treasury and Fiscal Services
  • Georgia Public Broadcasting

45
GAcollege411
  • Gacollege411 a hit with students
  • - More than 330,000 My 411 accounts
  • - 700 new accounts created every day
  • - More than 61,000 online applications
  • submitted
  • - 2.5 million extended visits

46
GAcollege411
  • Get the 411 on
  • going to college in Georgia!

47
  • Georgia HOPE Scholarship Program

48
HOPE439.3 million in FY 2006
49
HOPE
  • Three HOPE programs
  • - HOPE Scholarship
  • - HOPE Grant
  • - HOPE GED Grant

50
HOPE
  • HOPE Scholarship
  • - Students enrolled in degree programs at
  • approved Georgia public or private college
  • - Merit-based program
  • - Graduate from high school with a 3.0 GPA
  • - Maintain 3.0 in college
  • - Up to 127 hours

51
HOPE
  • (HOPE Scholarship continued)
  • Students at public colleges and universities
  • - Full tuition
  • - Approved mandatory fees (frozen at 2004
  • levels)
  • - 300 annual book allowance
  • Students enrolled at private colleges
  • - 3,000 per academic year

52
HOPE
  • HOPE Grant
  • - For students enrolled in technical
  • certificate or diploma program at public
  • college or technical college
  • - No academic requirement
  • - Pays tuition, fees, and 300 annual book
  • allowance
  • - Up to 95 quarter hours

53
HOPE
  • HOPE GED Grant
  • - For students who have earned a GED
  • diploma recognized by DTAE
  • - One-time 500 grant when student
  • enrolls in college

54
HOPE
  • Since 1993, HOPE has awarded more than 3.5
    billion to more than one million Georgia
    students.

55
One million HOPE recipients
56
  • Changes to HOPE

57
HOPE in 1993
  • Public college students
  • - Scholarship pays tuition only
  • - Freshmen and sophomore years
  • - Family income cap of 66,000
  • - 3.0 GPA checked at 30 hours
  • Private college students
  • - Grant of 500 per year

58
HOPE 10 year expansion
  • Expanded to cover junior, senior years
  • Fees and book allowance added
  • Family income caps removed
  • Grant for private college students becomes a
    3,000 annual scholarship
  • Chances to regain HOPE added
  • Pell offset removed

59
HOPE Rising costs
  • FY 1995 FY 2003, annual HOPE expenditures grew
    330
  • Analysts Demand for HOPE dollars will soon
    overtake lottery revenues
  • In 2004, legislature revises state law to ensure
    adequate funding of HOPE for the future

60
HOPE - 2004 changes
  • Fees capped at 2004 level
  • Triggers for elimination of fees and book
    allowance
  • Hour cap established for HOPE Grant
  • End-of-Spring checkpoint added

61
HOPE - 2004 changes(continued)
  • New high school HOPE GPA calculation
  • - GSFC calculates high school GPAs
  • - 3.0 GPA on 4.0 scale
  • - All attempted core courses counted
  • - Uniform weight for AP, IB courses
  • - Applies to anyone beginning college after
  • April 30, 2007
  • - First big group affected is Class of 2007

62
  • Transcript Exchange

63
Transcript Exchange
  • GSFC will collect transcripts and other
    information from Georgia high schools and
    calculate the HOPE GPA of every graduating
    senior.
  • An electronic process using School Information
    Systems and GAcollege411

64
Transcript Exchange
  • Its a monster project we call it TrEx
  • - Approximately 600 public and private
  • high schools
  • - 80,000 graduating seniors
  • - 50 plus grading systems
  • - Three dozen different SIS in use

65
Transcript Exchange
  • Phase I Installation
  • - GSFC has visited schools
  • - Training school personnel
  • - Installing customized software

66
Transcript Exchange
  • Monthly progress report to each school 
  • Today, on Phase I
  • - 103 schools are Red (in trouble)
  • - 188 are Yellow (getting there)
  • - 339 are Green (Installation
  • complete!)

67
Transcript Exchange
  • Once installation is complete
  • - SIS can transmit transcript information to
  • a GAcollege411 database.
  • - Other information, such as grading scales,
  • is also entered via the website.
  • - GSFC then can pull the information from
  • the database and calculate each students
  • HOPE GPA.

68
Transcript Exchange
  • Phase II Data clean up
  • - The school has to give us the correct
  • data, correctly formatted.
  • - Phase II is not as difficult as Phase I,
  • but it is just as important.
  • - A school cannot begin Phase II until
  • Phase I has been completed.

69
Transcript Exchange
  • Today, on Phase II
  • - 163 schools are Red
  • - 475 are Yellow
  • - 8 are Green

70
Transcript Exchange
  • Schools have been working hard to implement TrEx
    Thank you!
  • Now, critical deadlines are near
  • - Preliminary calculations begin soon
  • - Final calculations in June
  • - Many schools are making good progress,
  • others have a lot of work to do.

71
Transcript Exchange
  • Time is short!
  • Find out how your school is doing!
  • Make sure your eligible students receive HOPE in
    a timely manner.

72
Contact Information
  • Georgia Student Finance Commission
  • 2082 East Exchange Place
  • Tucker, Georgia 30084
  • www.GAcollege411.org
  • 1-800-505-GSFC

73
  • Questions?
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