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Wang, Marian; Supiano, Beckie; Fuller, Andrea – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
As the cost of college has spiraled ever upward and median family income has fallen, the loan program, called Parent PLUS, has become indispensable for increasing numbers of parents desperate to make their children's college plans work. Last year the government disbursed $10.6-billion in Parent PLUS loans to just under a million families. Even…
Descriptors: Employment Level, Student Loan Programs, Paying for College, Debt (Financial)
Sims, Jeffrey – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
2008 has been a tumultuous year in the financial world, culminating in scandals and bailouts. In 2009, the author asserts, people can probably expect not only more financial upheaval, but also further attempts by state and local governments to stem the all-but-fated turmoil. But in all the talk of bailouts, of embattled homeowners, and the…
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), College Graduates, Loan Repayment, Financial Problems
Field, Kelly – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
In a speech before a group of career-college executives and lobbyists, freshman Representative Jason Altmire hinted that he would look out for the sector's interests in a coming conference between the House of Representatives and the Senate on legislation to reauthorize the Higher Education Act. Referring to a provision in the bill that would…
Descriptors: Proprietary Schools, Federal Aid, Educational Policy, Legislators
Smith, Lauren – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Faced with having to make a decision between the career they want and one that will pay enough for them to climb out of debt, many college students are choosing the latter. This trend has alarmed some observers and has revived interest in an idea once thought to be a relic of the Clinton administration: income-contingent repayment. Legislation…
Descriptors: Income Contingent Loans, Student Loan Programs, Federal Legislation, Federal Government
Healy, Patrick; Hebel, Sara – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1999
A new federal regulation requires that both students and institutions repay the portion of student aid not used for education. Students must repay the "unearned" portion, less a 50% discount; colleges must return the portion of student aid that does not cover the period in which they were enrolled. Critics include community colleges,…
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Dropouts, Federal Aid, Federal Regulation
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1986
Under the College Housing Loan Program, the Education Department lends money to colleges to build and refurbish dormitories and other student facilities. Problems plaguing the loan program are discussed. Both colleges and the federal government have broken most of the rules governing the program. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Administration, College Buildings, College Housing, Colleges
Zook, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1993
Colleges risk losing eligibility for government student loan programs, because of tightened loan-repayment requirements for participating institutions. Economic factors and some data-processing errors are blamed for high student default rates. Default rates are charted by state, lender, institution type, and guarantee agency. Colleges threatened…
Descriptors: Eligibility, Federal Aid, Federal Programs, Federal Regulation
Palmer, Stacy E.; Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1987
Colleges and universities will be held directly responsible for loan repayments by their former students. Most postsecondary institutions with default rates of more than 20% are for-profit trade schools, community colleges, or historically Black colleges. (MLW)
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Community Colleges, Federal Aid, Federal Government
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1987
Officials on 10 campuses that are testing the new income contingent loans say that borrowers don't understand how it works, and they predict that students would not like the new loans because the interest rates are so high that it could take a life-time to pay the money back. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Students, Educational Finance, Federal Aid, Government School Relationship
Deloughry, Thomas J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1990
Student loans remain the most popular student-assistance program, because loans let lawmakers stretch federal dollars. Students have lost ground in the battle to keep up with rising tuition, etc. As an example students at the University of Illinois (Chicago) are borrowing three times as much as they did five years ago. (MLW)
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Educational Finance, Federal Aid, Federal Government
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1987
Concern about problems that inflexible educational loan payments cause for some people has reopened the idea of income-contingent repayment schedules, but financial aid experts see insurmountable problems in stretching out loans indefinitely, increasing indebtedness by slowing down payments, overall inequities favoring high-income borrowers, and…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Costs, Debt (Financial), Federal Aid
Chronicle of Higher Education, 2004
"Chronicle of Higher Education" presents an abundant source of news and information for college and university faculty members and administrators. This June 18, 2004 issue of "Chronicle for Higher Education" includes the following articles: (1) "What Would Higher Education Do with $6-Billion a Year?" (Shireman,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Finance, Language Patterns, Foreign Countries