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Building a Comprehensive Collegiate Financial Education Program

Building a Comprehensive Collegiate Financial Education Program. Bryan Ashton Senior Program Coordinator, Financial Wellness . Financial Wellness.

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Building a Comprehensive Collegiate Financial Education Program

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  1. Building a Comprehensive Collegiate Financial Education Program Bryan Ashton Senior Program Coordinator, Financial Wellness

  2. Financial Wellness • The financially well person develops a healthy budget managing both income and expenditures. They develop a discipline of saving to prepare for short-term, long-term, and emergency expenses. They manage credit cards and other consumer credit usage responsibly and develop the skills to manage resources.

  3. Agenda • Establish need • Scarlet & Gray Financial (SGF) at Ohio State • Growth of peer financial literacy at The Ohio State University • Partnerships • Curriculum • Outcome metrics

  4. Financial Landscape for Students • Nearly 70% of college students take out loans to pay for school • Average student loan debt: $26,600 • Over 9% default within two years • Over 13% default within three years • Nearly 25%of college students have considered dropping out of school based on amount of money owed Source: Department of Education (2012). National Student Loan Data System [Database]. Retrieved from: http://www.nslds.ed.gov/nslds_SA/defaultmanagement/. Source: Ohio Student Financial Wellness Survey: Student Loans, Credit Cards, and Stress (2011). Center for the Study of Student Life, The Ohio State University.

  5. Financial Landscape for Students • Nearly 70% of college students take out loans to pay for school • Average student loan debt: $26,600 • Over 9% default within two years • Over 13% default within three years • Nearly 25%of college students have considered dropping out of school based on amount of money owed Source: Department of Education (2012). National Student Loan Data System [Database]. Retrieved from: http://www.nslds.ed.gov/nslds_SA/defaultmanagement/. Source: Ohio Student Financial Wellness Survey: Student Loans, Credit Cards, and Stress (2011). Center for the Study of Student Life, The Ohio State University.

  6. Financial Landscape for Students • Nearly 70% of college students take out loans to pay for school • Average student loan debt: $26,600 • Over 9% default within two years • Over 13% default within three years • Nearly 25%of college students have considered dropping out of school based on amount of money owed Source: Department of Education (2012). National Student Loan Data System [Database]. Retrieved from: http://www.nslds.ed.gov/nslds_SA/defaultmanagement/. Source: Ohio Student Financial Wellness Survey: Student Loans, Credit Cards, and Stress (2011). Center for the Study of Student Life, The Ohio State University.

  7. Financial Stress and Ohio College Students Source: Ohio Student Financial Wellness Survey: Student Loans, Credit Cards, and Stress (2011). Center for the Study of Student Life, The Ohio State University.

  8. “Wellness is an active, ongoing process which involves becoming aware of and taking steps toward a healthier, happier, successful life." The Ohio State University Student Wellness Center

  9. Student Wellness Center 9 DIMENSIONS OF WELLNESS Career Creative Emotional Environmental Financial Intellectual Physical Social Spiritual

  10. Student Wellness Center Wellness is INTERCONNECTED

  11. Financial Wellness & SGF 2006 Scarlet & Gray Financial founded SWC & EHE 2001 Credit card task force MNBA funds educational efforts 2003 Financial wellness incorporated into Student Wellness strategic planning 2012 Huntington National Bank partnership Growth of SGF

  12. Growth of SGF at Ohio State Growth of SGF at Ohio State Additional recent expansions Outreach hours Assessments Online Content $tart$mart

  13. Projected 2013-2014 Numbers Outreach Team 37 peer coaches 19 students in Leadership Development Program – Autumn 30 students in Leadership Development Program – Spring • Over 1,400 one on one appointments • Over 150 presentations • Over 7,000 students reached • Additional marketing campaigns – FASFA etc

  14. Training Session Up Front – Leadership Development Program On Going Annual Semester Updates From Financial Aid Alumni and Industry Engagement Topical discussions • Financial Foundations • Go through their own finances • Motivational Interviewing • Client Relationships • Nuts and Bolts

  15. Outcome Metrics • 4.7/5 – overall client satisfaction • Qualitative student feedback • “I enjoyed talking to someone other than my immediate family and friends about financial concerns.” • “[Coach] was extremely prepared and explained things in layman’s terms.” • “Very personable, genuine advice given, felt very comfortable.”

  16. Outcome Metrics

  17. Assessment Efforts • Wellness Inventory used to triage students • I am confident that I can engage in financial budgeting • I stress about my finances • I am concerned about my financial future • I practice financial budgeting • I am able to pay my bills on time • I am free of credit card debt • I feel stressed by the amount of money I owe (credit cards, student loans, car payments etc)

  18. Additional Assessment • Pre and Post Test • Knowledge, Attitudes, Behaviors and Stress • Is there a healthy level of financial stress? • National Financial Wellness and Loan Assessment • Feb 2014 pilot • Fall 2014 full implementation

  19. Financial Wellness Advisory Board • Recommendations from acceptance to repayment • Partners include: • Financial Aid • Academic Affairs • First Year Experience • Graduate/Professional Schools • Student Legal Services • Office of Research • Office of International Affairs • Office of Veterans Affairs • Student Service Center

  20. Campus Partners • Financial Aid • Admissions • Student Service Center • Career Services Office • Fisher College of Business • College Education and Human Ecology • Center for the Study of Student Life • Student Legal Services • University Housing • Office of International Affairs • The Graduate School • First Year Experience • Counseling and Consultation Service • Student Advocacy • Off Campus and Commuter Student Engagement • Dinning Services • Office of the University Treasurer • Athletics • Economic Access • Alumni Association • Student Organizations • Student Governments

  21. From Acceptance to Graduation • Pre-Enrollment: College Funding Plan, Interest Rate Understanding and Cost of Attendance • 1st Year: Financial Goals, Budgetingand Credit • 2nd Year: Financial Education Mandate (Phasing In) • 3rd Year: Graduate School Planning • 4th/5th Year: Real World Preparation • Graduate / Professional Students: Enhanced budgeting, financial goal setting, credit and debt repayment planning

  22. Financial Education Mandate • 2 Part Mandate • First Complete an Online Module (Financial Knowledge) • Second Complete a 1:1 Coaching Session (Financial Attitudes and Behaviors) • Scalability – Will Work To Triage Based on Risk Assessment

  23. Future Growth • Trial part of the 2nd Year Experience • Additional outreach locations • FWAB recommendation implementation • Greater partnership with Admissions and Financial Aid • Specific tracks: • Graduate, Professional, International Students

  24. Lessons Learned • Collaboration • High Risk Behaviors Tie In • Motivational Interviewing and Social Norming • Knowledge Gap • Community Assistance • Community and K-12 Partnerships Are Key

  25. Questions? Ashton.53@osu.edu 614-292-4527

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