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Showing posts with label Sewanee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sewanee. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

197. MVCAP fyi

See free MVCAP e-books on college admissions and financial aid for sharing, printing, and downloading at our online resource library: http://issuu.com/mvcap

1. Jobs that pay well, no degree required, by Anthony Balderrama - http://bit.ly/eyss8f #cnn

"That's not to say you shouldn't earn a college or graduate degree if you want. However, if college isn't the right option for you or if it's not a plausible option in the short term, consider these 15 professions that don't require a college degree but pay well:"

2. Economy shuffles Princeton Review's Best Value Colleges, by Mary Beth Marklein - http://t.co/7J4vIXM via @USATODAY

‎"Federal stimulus money, which helped many public universities hold tuition down, is about to dry up. Some private schools, including Williams and Dartmouth, are paring financial aid. House Republicans have proposed cutting the maximum Pell Grant given to needy students."

3. Four Questions on How to Cut Tuition, by John M. McCardell Jr. - http://nyti.ms/fvg07r

‎"I would not presume to say what other institutions might be capable of doing. But I WILL say that any institution that has embraced the high tuition/high discount mode of fee-setting is, sooner or later, heading for a fall."

4. Funding Completion, by Hilary Pennington - Inside Higher Ed: http://bit.ly/hOtoab

"Today, Complete College America (an effort supported by the Gates Foundation and four other national philanthropies) is inviting all governors to take the Completion Innovation Challenge. The 10 governors with the most innovative and inventive proposals to significantly boost college completion in their states each will receive a $1 million grant."

5. Wanted: A Dependable Backer, by Dan Berrett - Inside Higher Ed: http://bit.ly/hzJ1mf

"State governments have proven to be unreliable partners," Robert J. Birgeneau, chancellor of the University of California at Berkeley, said here Saturday morning at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. "The federal government needs to guarantee the fate of our great public institutions."

6. U.S. House Votes to Slash Current-Year Education Funding, by Alyson Klein - http://t.co/wFLnmJj

"The U.S. Department of Education's current-year budget would be slashed by more than $5 billion under a bill approved early this morning by the U.S. House of Representatives on an almost strictly party line vote of 235-189. That sets up a showdown as the legislation heads to the Democratically controlled Senate, where lawmakers are expected to reject the cuts."

7. Generous, but Not So Generous, by Scott Jaschik - Inside Higher Ed: http://bit.ly/hNTmL9

"While aid officials almost uniformly want to encourage more colleges to offer more aid, many have been quietly critical of institutions like Yale, Harvard and Stanford for being as generous as they are to families with incomes as high as $200,000 . . . ."I think Yale want too far, farther than anyone else," said one aid director at an elite college who asked not to be identified. . . ."

8. Financial Aid Growing Faster than Tuition - Notre Dame Magazine // University of Notre Dame - http://t.co/vQla4GD

‎"Trustees approved an increase of $1,150 in tuition and $290 in room and board for next fall, bringing the average undergraduate student’s bill to $29,100 a year. The combined increase of $1,440 or 5.2 percent is the smallest, percentage-wise, in two decades. . . . Even with the price increase, Notre Dame continues to cost less than all but two of the other institutions in U.S. News & World Report magazine’s top 20 national universities."



Thursday, February 17, 2011

194. MVCAP fyi

See free MVCAP e-books on college admissions and financial aid for sharing, printing, and downloading at our online resource library: http://issuu.com/mvcap

1. Snapshot of One College’s Admissions Process, by Jacques Steinberg - http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/02/16/today-grinnell/

"The segment linked above, which was broadcast this morning on NBC’s “Today” show, takes viewers behind the closed doors of the admissions process at Grinnell College in Iowa. Grinnell, which has received nearly 3,000 applications for an incoming freshman class of about 400, follows an intensive, holistic process similar to those used at dozens of other selective (and in some cases fiercely competitive) colleges."

2. Price Check at Sewanee, by Scott Jaschik - Inside Higher Ed: http://bit.ly/fCxruy

"The University of the South on Wednesday announced that it is cutting total student charges (tuition, fees and room and board) by 10 percent -- one of the more dramatic shifts in tuition policy announced by a competitive private college in recent years. Total charges this year at Sewanee are just over $46,000."

3. How Class Dictates Delay, by Allie Grasgreen - Inside Higher Ed: http://bit.ly/e9K6Yi

‎"Not only are high school graduates of lower socioeconomic status more likely to delay college, but they also experience longer gaps and are less likely to graduate once they do enroll."

4. Notre Dame sex assault investigation, by Stacy St. Clair and Todd Lighty - chicagotribune.com: http://t.co/0ypEQDv

"I'm involved in this because I love Notre Dame and I don't want to see this happen again," he said. "Notre Dame has done so much good over the years, but I think there's an issue that needs to be corrected."

5. MSU-led study identifies risks for quitting college, by Andy Henion MSU News Michigan State University: http://t.co/uMywWrm

"The critical event with the most influence was depression. Students also were sensitive to being recruited by an employer or another institution; losing financial aid or experiencing a large increase in tuition or living costs; unexpected bad grade; and roommate conflicts.They were less sensitive to critical events such as death in the family; significant injury; inability to enter their intended major; becoming addicted to a substance; coming into a large sum of money; losing a job needed to pay tuition; and becoming engaged or married."

6. House Budget Ammendment Targets Rules Seeking Accountability for For-Profit Colleges - http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/16/for-profit-colleges-ammendment_n_823868.html?ir=College

‎"The budget amendment, sponsored by Rep. John Kline, R-Minn., and supported by Democratic Reps. Alcee Hastings of Florida and Carolyn McCarthy of New York, would prevent the department from issuing or enforcing any of the regulations regarding student debt burdens through the end of the fiscal year in September."

7. President Obama Proposes Cut in Aid Programs to Preserve Pell Grants: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-kantrowitz/president-obama-proposes-_b_823236.html

‎"The program's recent growth is partly because of the economy and partly because the maximum grant was increased to compensate for four years of flat funding during the Bush administration. The number of students filing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is up by about a third in the last three years. More of the applicants are qualifying for the Pell Grant."

8. 'Some College Needed to Step Up and Say, Enough', by Jacques Steinberg - http://nyti.ms/i0OjRx

“The university has made a bold and perhaps risky move,” John M. McCardell Jr., vice chanceller of Sewanee (and former president of Middlebury) tells Ms. Lewin. “But given the realities of higher education in the current economy, we believe that some college or university needed to step up and say, ‘Enough.’ ”

9. Bucking Trend, College Will Cut Price, by Tamar Lewin - http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/17/education/edlife/17tuition.html?_r=1

‎"The college, formally Sewanee: The University of the South, is betting that the drop in tuition — which at this point it can afford — will help it compete on two fronts: with the public universities that are siphoning off a growing share of the students it accepts, and with other private colleges where tuition is likely to increase by 4 to 5 percent this year, as it has for the last two years."

10. For-Profit Colleges Show Increasing Dependence on Federal Student Aid, by Goldie Blumenstyk - http://chronicle.com/article/For-Profit-Colleges-Show/126394/

"The 90/10 rule applies only to for-profit colleges. And only federal student-aid money, commonly referred to as Title IV funds (for the section of the Higher Education Act that authorizes them), is counted toward the 90-percent limit. Other sources of federal aid, such as money from the GI Bill or military tuition reimbursements that many students use to pay for college, are not treated as part of the Title IV side of the calculation."

11. Earmark Idiocy, by Joe Klein - http://t.co/HJ4jKp6

"Finally, a Senate staff education expert told me: "In education funding, an earmark is anything that isn't granted by federal formula [like Title I money to poor districts] or a contract determined by competitive bidding. There are about a dozen national programs that are about to be cut from the education appropriations bill this year, including Teach for America, because they are technically considered earmarks."

12. Program to increase college financial aid applications stalls, by Yesenia Robles - http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_17397844

"The project's goal is to provide names of students who have completed the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), those who have incorrectly filled it out and those who haven't started it, so that schools can target the help they provide.Canty-Woessner said the goal was to have the information updated weekly. But a delay in compiling and distributing the data at the federal level means districts won't know which of their students have filled out the form until early May — too late to reach the students as they graduate, and too late to get them the maximum amount of money they might be eligible for."


"Cal State Northridge has the highest percentage of underrepresented minorities in the entire state of California,” said Dr. Harry Hellenbrand, CSUN’s provost and Vice President for academic affairs. . . . The report also states that roles have reversed for many CA residents and their children. Parents are increasingly dependent on their children. Some students are using their financial aid to help support their household."

14. Financial aid brings long line - http://shar.es/36pRf

"Though there is usually a long line once each fall and spring, there were twice as many people than usual trying to pick up checks on Tuesday. The snow days prevented students from picking up one round of checks, so the financial aid office was working double-time to get the checks out, said a college spokeswoman."

15. Asheville City Schools' summit to target achievement gap, by Julie Ball - http://t.co/3W7sjG8

‎"Superintendent Allen Johnson has said the system is “declaring war” on the achievement gap. . . .“We've got to start here and make some inroads. We've got to come up with a plan to address it immediately,” said Gene Bell, chairman of the city school board. . . . This issue is not unique to Asheville City Schools — it is a national and statewide problem."