Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
The Daily Lobo The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895
Latest Issue
Read our print edition on Issuu

Eligible students neglect FAFSA

by Matt Galati

Cavalier Daily (U.Virginia)

(U-WIRE) CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - Nearly half of all students enrolled in accredited colleges and universities nationwide do not apply for the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, the American Council on Education reported last week.

According to the report, nearly 1.7 million low- and moderate-income students eligible for aid neglected to fill out the FAFSA during the survey's 1999-2000 window.

Overall, 32.5 percent of full-time undergraduate students did not fill out a FAFSA. While higher-income and part-time students were least likely to fill out the form, 13.7 percent of dependent students with an annual income less than $20,000 did not submit the application.

The report stated that about 850,000 students who did not complete the FAFSA would have qualified for at least a Pell Grant, an award administered to students by the federal government.

Enjoy what you're reading?
Get content from The Daily Lobo delivered to your inbox
Subscribe

"We certainly think there are students out there who may be eligible for financial aid who are not taking advantage of it because they are not filling out the FAFSA," said Jacqueline King, the report's author. "While the majority of low- and middle-income students do fill out the FAFSA, there is a significant minority of those who do not."

She added the report addressed the issue of students receiving financial aid from sources not requiring a FAFSA, but that number did not account for a substantial amount.

Melvin Miller, associate director of Student Financial Services at the University of Virginia, said many university students do not apply for financial aid because they prematurely assume they are ineligible to receive it.

"A lot of students who I speak with in presentations say they don't think they will be eligible, but they don't fill out the form, so they don't know," Miller said. "The trick is to educate the students so they know there is a possibility for eligibility. They might have a greater eligibility for aid than they assume."

Some students do know about financial aid or may be disinterested with the application process, King said.

"Some students think the money is only available if you have a perfect SAT score or are a top athlete," King said.

At the University of Virginia, 25 percent of students apply for and receive some sort of financial aid, Miller said. He emphasized the importance of filing the FAFSA early.

"We don't have a deadline date. We have priority filing date," Miller said. "We attempt to get students' information in so we can process in a timely matter - in time to register and enroll without any hesitation."

Students can learn of options through financial aid administrators.

King said educating students about financial aid is the responsibility of many actors, including universities, federal and state governments, high schools and community organizations.

"These statistics tell us that we all need to do a better job to make sure that people know there are resources available," she said.

Comments
Powered by SNworks Solutions by The State News
All Content © 2025 The Daily Lobo