Headline News

In Bid to Deter Misconduct, U.S. Releases New Data on Financial Aid Enforcement

A for-profit college based in Washington, D.C., that offered IT and health-care programs shut down in May 2023 after the Education Department cut it off from federal financial aid—one of 35 institutions in the last three years that have lost access to the funding source that’s a lifeline for most colleges. 

But the department didn’t say anything publicly about its decision to take action against Prospect College after it found evidence of an "illegal scheme” to evade the so-called 90-10 rule. Under that rule, only 90 percent of a for-profit college’s revenue can come from federal financial aid. Prospect counted institutional payments to students as revenue to the college to keep its federal revenue under 90 percent, and when the department recalculated the college’s revenue for fiscal 2019, 2020 and 2021, the college failed the 90-10 standard all three years.


Read Full Article

More news from NAICU

  • Study spells out impact of Pennsylvania private, independent colleges on their communities
  • Survey: Most Parents Still Want Their Kids to Go to College
  • Law or Medical School May Be Out of Reach for More College Students After New Federal Loan Limits
  • FAFSA Completion Rate Bounces Back to Pre-Pandemic Levels
  • Minnesota Colleges and Universities Weight Impacts of Changes in Senate Bill
  • Pell Grant Changes Could Raise College Cost for Virginia Students
  • Back to Article Overview