Headline News

The FAFSA Blunders Haven’t Let Up. Now the Education Department Has a Credibility Issue.

Early this year the Education Department shared what appeared to be objectively good news.  Millions of college financial aid forms – commonly referred to as FAFSAs, or Free Applications for Federal Student Aid – had been successfully submitted, the agency said in an announcement on Jan. 30. Federal officials had also updated their aid calculations to make it “as simple and easy as possible for families to get help paying for college,” according to the agency. But tucked into the fifth paragraph of that bulletin was a troubling tidbit: Colleges and universities would not receive students’ financial aid data until the first half of March, more than a month later than the government had promised. 
Read Full Article

More news from NAICU

  • ‘Potentially Existential’: Higher Ed Denounces Proposed Federal Funding Strings
  • Education Department now has 10 interagency agreements: Here are the details
  • How Trump’s Demand for Admissions Data Is Burdening Your College
  • New Student Visas Dropped 35.6% Last Summer
  • Presidents Pressured in Trump’s Second Term
  • McMahon: Education Department shutdown is still the goal
  • Back to Article Overview