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College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012 Please email us so we may send you updates Name School/organization Email address To: [email protected]

College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

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College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012. Please email us so we may send you updates Name School/organization Email address To: [email protected]. College Bound Scholarship Webinar October 11, 2011. Overview of Program Financial Aid 101 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

College Bound Scholarship Webinar(Presented October 11, 2011)

Updated February 1, 2012

Please email us so we may send you updates

NameSchool/organizationEmail addressTo: [email protected]

Page 2: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

College Bound Scholarship WebinarOctober 11, 2011

• Overview of Program• Financial Aid 101• CB Scholarship payouts• Resources

Beth Ahlstrom, College Bound Scholarship Program Administrator 360-596-4808Vicki Merkel, Associate Director of Student Financial Assistance 360-753-7853Rachelle Sharpe, Director of Student Financial Assistance 360-753-7872

Page 3: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

The College Bound Scholarship offers an early promise of financial aid to qualifying 7th and 8th graders in Washington.

• College Bound is essentially an early commitment of an enhanced State Need Grant award.

• This scholarship combines with State Need Grant to cover tuition (at public college rates), plus a small book allowance.

• The program was created in 2007 for the purpose of improving high school graduation and college enrollment rates for students from low-income families.

• There are nearly 16,000 College Bound applicants in their senior year

Page 4: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

College Bound Scholarship Applications

Page 5: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

College Bound Scholarship Students

Page 6: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

The Class of 2012Who are they?

• First College Bound cohort to graduate high school and apply to college.

• Approximately 16,000 (57% of eligible students) in the 2012 cohort.

• These students are from 630 middle schools.

• 56% are students of color.

• 46% male; 54% are female.

Page 7: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

American Indian/Native Alaskan

2%

Asian9% African

American8%

Hispanic 32%

White44%

Hawaiian/ Pacific Islander1%

Multiracial4%

Based on 11,675 matched recordsfrom OSPI for the class of 2012

College Bound Students by EthnicityClass of 2012

Page 8: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

FINANCIAL AID 101

Page 9: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

G IF T A IDG ran ts

S ch o la rsh ip s

L O A NSN eed & N on -N eed

L ow In te res tD e fe rred R ep aym en t

E M PL O YM E NTW ork -S tu d yIn s titu tion a l

O n o r O ff C am p u s

T YPE S O F F INA NC IA L A ID

F E D E R A L S TA TE S C H O O L S P R IV A TE

S O U R C E S O F F IN A N C IA L A ID

Types and Sources of Financial Aid

Page 10: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

FAFSAFree Application for Federal Student Aid

• The FAFSA is the primary form for all government aid.

• All colleges require the FAFSA.

• Don’t wait until taxes are filed – estimate and make corrections later.

• Colleges may require additional documents & have other deadlines.

• Re-apply every year.

• Never pay to fill out the FAFSA – it’s free.

• Don’t wait until admitted to college to file the FAFSA.

College Bound Students

• May file as early as January 1.

• Encouraged to file by Feb. 1 but may continue to file.

• Message to students: “File today – don’t delay!”www.FAFSA.gov

Page 11: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

• Continued streamlining of the online application.

• Families can have their tax information retrieved from the IRS. They can also submit the FAFSA prior to completion of taxes and revise later.

• IRS Data Retrieval tool is available in English and Spanish.

• Students and parents can begin retrieving 2011 IRS data at the end of January 2012.

• New High School questions: school name, city, and state.

FAFSA News

Page 12: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

• Calculated from data submitted on student’s FAFSA using a federal formula.

• Represents the amount a family can reasonably be expected to contribute.

• Stays the same regardless of college.• Two components

– Parent Contribution– Student Contribution

Expected Family Contribution (EFC)

Page 13: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

Cost of Attendance (COA)

1. Tuition and fees2. Books and supplies3. Room and board – living expenses4. Transportation5. Personal expenses/miscellaneous

• Includes all educational expenses• Varies from campus to campus

Page 14: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

Need Varies Among Schools

2010-11 CommunityCollege

Public4-Year

Private4-Year

Typical COA

$15,800 $20,200 $42,700

EFC $3,100 $3,100 $3,100

Financial Need

$12,700 $17,100 $39,600

COA – EFC = Need

Page 15: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

COLLEGE BOUND SCHOLARSHIP PAYOUTS

Page 16: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

COLLEGE BOUND CHECKLIST

To receive the scholarship, you must: Have a complete application on file at HECB. File the FAFSA as soon as possible - you can file Jan.1! Graduate high school with a 2.0 or higher. Be a good citizen with no felony convictions. Enroll within one year of high school graduation in one of

the 67eligible institutions in Washington. Be a U.S. citizen or eligible non-citizen.

Resources for undocumented students

Good, now you are ready to move on down the road.

Page 17: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

Student’s FAFSA RecordThe Department of Education will send the FAFSA application data to the colleges listed on the student’s FAFSA and to the HECB.

HECB will match the student’s FAFSA report with the College Bound application and notify the student via email* if we are successful.

HECB will then send a list of College Bound students to the colleges listed on the student’s FAFSA.

If students don’t hear from the HECB within 2 weeks of submitting the FAFSA, they should call us: 1-888-535-0747

*notification will be to the email listed on student’s FAFSA

Page 18: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

The College Bound award may consist of State Need Grant,College Bound and other state aid.

State Need Grant is the largest state financial aid program.

College Bound was designed to coordinate with State Need Grant to cover the maximum award.

The maximum award is based on tuition (at public institution rates), fees and a book allowance.

The student’s campus award letter will describe

specific award amounts.

COLLEGE BOUND AWARD3

Page 19: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

ResourcesFAFSA and general financial aid information:www.fafsa.govCollege Bound informationwww.collegebound.wa.govWashington State financial aid programs:www.hecb.wa.govtheWashBoard.org: for Washington scholarshipswww.thewashboard.orgResources for undocumented studentswww.hecb.wa.gov/PreparingForCollege/CollegeBound/2012Resources for counselors Washington is College BoundResources for studentsI am College Bound EduBlog

Page 20: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

COMBINED AWARD EXAMPLE

Two-Year College Max Award

Public Four Year Max Award$0

$2,000

$4,000

$6,000

$8,000

$10,000

$3,100

$8,500

$500

$500

State Need Grant College Bound Scholarship

Tuition & fees

Tuition & fees

Page 21: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

Why Students May Not Receive College Bound Funds

• Family’s income does not meet the income standard (65% Median Family Income - $53,000 for a family of 4 in 2011-12) .

• Student’s total financial aid is greater than their financial “need.”

• Students do not enroll full-time.

Page 22: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

• Initial allocation of $7.4 million in 2007

– Invested in GET and expected to be valued at $12 million in 2012

– Anticipated to cover first two years of payouts• Future appropriations can be made each fiscal year as with

other financial aid programs.

• 2011 Legislature tasked the Caseload Forecast Council with projecting College Bound enrollments for budget purposes.

A Washington Opportunity Pathway

College Bound Funding

Page 23: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

Other College Bound Rules• Students have one year from high school graduation to enroll. • College Bound is a four-year scholarship (12 quarters or 8

semesters maximum).• Scholarship must be used within five years of graduation.• Enrollment does not have to be continuous.• Students may enroll part-time.• Students must maintain Satisfactory Academic Progress (SAP).

Page 24: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

NEXT STEPS

How We Can Work Together

Page 25: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

Support in High Schools• Monitor College Bound students to ensure they meet GPA requirements

and are on track to graduate.– Ask HECB for a list of your College Bound students

• Use resources for seniors posted on HECB web site – Preparing for College-College Bound

Page 26: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

Student ResourcesPost links on school’s website

http://www.hecb.wa.gov/PreparingForCollege/CollegeBound/2012Facebook: I am College BoundOur new blog: collegeboundwa.edublogs.org

Page 27: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

Search for More Funds

Successful January 2010 launch; more than $40 million offered via theWashBoard.org since its inception.

Nearly 70,000 scholarship seekers and 200 providers are registered.

Lists more than 600 scholarships. In 2010-11, $28 million in scholarships offered. Continues to grow and develop for the benefit of Washington’s

students - version 2.0 in development now.

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Page 28: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

You Are Not Alone• College Success Foundation www.collegesuccessfoundation.org • NELA Center for Student Success www.nela.net • Washington College Access Network• Regional partnerships

• Tacoma College Support Network• Seattle College Access Network• North Central Community Foundation, Wenatchee• Community Center for Education Results• Alliance for Education• GEAR UP• Many more…

Ways they can help• Assistance with financial aid nights• FAFSA completion• College Goal Sunday www.collegegoalsundaywa.org

Page 29: College Bound Scholarship Webinar (Presented October 11, 2011) Updated February 1, 2012

Want to know more?

FAFSA and general financial aid information:www.fafsa.gov

Washington State financial aid programs:www.hecb.wa.gov

Questions & suggestions? Email [email protected] with WEBINAR in the subject line.