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TAIR Conference 2008, Galveston Trish Norman, University of Texas System

A Framework to Understand College Access and Affordability at the National, State and Institutional Levels. TAIR Conference 2008, Galveston Trish Norman, University of Texas System Roy Mathew, University of Texas at El Paso. Overview. College Access Enrollment State Appropriations

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TAIR Conference 2008, Galveston Trish Norman, University of Texas System

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  1. A Framework to Understand College Access and Affordability at the National, State and Institutional Levels TAIR Conference 2008, Galveston Trish Norman, University of Texas System Roy Mathew, University of Texas at El Paso

  2. Overview • College Access • Enrollment • State Appropriations • Tuition and Fees • Financial Aid and Net Price • Institutional Initiatives

  3. College Access Most agree • broad access to higher education is a worthy goal. • to remain globally competitive, more Americans must be educated • Lifelong learning is becoming an integral part of higher education Source: Thinking Outside the Box

  4. College Access - Beginnings • Higher Education Act of 1965 – Access to Higher Education became a primary theme of federal policy • Focus to serve all students • Federal BEOG Grants – primary tool for providing access to low income students Source: Thinking Outside the Box

  5. College Access – Today Shared Responsibility • Nationally • Federal (Pell) Grants • Subsidized Loans • State Grants • Need vs. Merit based • Institutional Initiatives • Tuition Guarantees and Set Asides • Flat Rate Tuition

  6. Enrollment Growth Source: Digest of Higher Education Statistics, NCES

  7. State Appropriations In the past, some “states used low tuition as a primary tool for assuring access” However, with more students attending college, “Higher Education has became more costly as share of the available public resources.” Source: Thinking Outside the Box

  8. State Appropriations Sources: Grapevine (Illinois State University); The College Board (Trends in College Pricing)

  9. State Appropriations State Appropriations have not kept up with enrollment growth and hit a 25-year low of $5,825 per FTE student in FY05. Source: Tuition at Public Colleges and Universities: Policy Trends and Projections

  10. Tuition & Fees, Nationally Source: Trends in College Pricing 2006

  11. Tuition & Fees by Region Source: Trends in College Pricing 2006

  12. Revenues per FTE Student Source: State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO)

  13. UT System – Revenue Trends Source: UT System

  14. Tuition and Fees, 10 Most Populous States

  15. Total Price of Attendance10 Most Populous States

  16. Financial Aid (Federal) Reauthorization of the Higher Education Act (1992) • Expanded eligibility for financial aid • Raised loan limits • Introduced • Unsubsidized Loans • Tax Credits

  17. Financial Aid (Federal) Source: Trends in College Pricing 2006

  18. Financial Aid (Federal) Source: Trends in College Pricing 2006

  19. Financial Aid (Texas) Source: IPEDS

  20. Financial Aid (UT System) Source: UT System Institutions

  21. Net Price An estimate of how much students and their families actually pay for college: Net Price = published price minus average financial aid and tax benefits

  22. Understanding Net Price Net Price (of Tuition & Fees) (example of an individual student paying the average T&F, receiving the average Pell Grant and subsidized loan) Tuition & Fees $ 5,836 Pell Grants - 2,354 Subsidized Loan - 3,074 ----------- Net Price $ 408 % Discount 93%

  23. Understanding Net Price Net Price (of Total Price of Attendance) (example of an individual student paying the average Total Price of Attendance and receiving the average Pell Grant and subsidized loan) Tuition & Fees $15,937 Pell Grants - 2,354 Subsidized Loan - 3,074 ----------- Net Price $10,509 % Discount 34%

  24. Net Price The Condition of Education, 2007

  25. Net Price by Income The Condition of Education, 2007

  26. UT System Initiatives • Tuition Set Asides • Flat Rate Tuition • Tuition Rebates • Discounted Tuition for off-peak hours • Guaranteed Tuition Rates

  27. UT System – Need-Based Grant Aid Source: U.T. System Institutions

  28. UT System – Net Price Source: U.T. System Institutions

  29. Summary • College enrollment increasing • State appropriations not keeping up • Increase in Tuition & Fees to offset funding • Financial Aid supplementing cost at varying levels of need • UT System efforts to ensure Access and Affordability

  30. Sources • Blanco, C., Jones, D, Longanecker, D. and Michelau, D. Thinking Outside the Box: Policy Strategies for Readiness, Access and Success. Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, March 2007. • Digest of Higher Education Statistics: 2006. NCES, U.S. Department of Education. • The Condition of Education 2007.Total and Net Access Price of Attending a Postsecondary Institution. NCES, U.S. Department of Education, 2007. • Tuition at Public Colleges and Universities: Policy Trends and Projections. American Association of State Colleges and Universities, June 2006. • Trends in College Pricing 2006 and Trends in Student Aid 2006. CollegeBoard, 2006. • State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO). State Higher Education Finance Data & Figures (SHEF) FY 2006. • Integrated Postsecondary Education System (IPEDS). NCES, U.S. Department of Education.

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