Great news for Students using Financial Aid Student Loans

The following is an article from http://www.TheAtlantic.com  written by Derek Thompson.

Derek Thompson – Derek Thompson is a staff editor at Atlantic Business, where he writes about economics, business and technology. Derek has also written for BusinessWeek and Slate.

3 Cheers for the New Student Lending Law

Mar 30 2010, 9:00 AM ET

Today President Obama signed a bill that overhauls of the student loan industry.* For decades, the federal government has supported student lenders by backing loans originated by private banks. Today we take back the bank subsidy and use it to spend down the deficit and pay low-income kids to finish college. Good day.

Our byzantine student lending system is essentially the product of two competing principles: managed affordability and capitalism. The government guarantees the loans because otherwise private banks wouldn’t make low-rate loans to an 18-year old kid with no earnings, no credit history, and zero collateral when he won’t start paying interest in four years. So the banks get the interest and the government gets stuck with 97% of the losses if the student defaults. Heads, students pay the bank. Tails, taxpayers pay the bank.

But the government has been loathe to take over the industry itself — even if it means leaving tens of billions of dollars on the table — because reasonable efforts to simplify the system are met with hysterical screaming about socialism from former Education secretaries who should really know better.

Effective today, student lending will be a government-run program. What does that mean for borrowing students? Not a whole lot, as I understand it. They will fill out the same paperwork and pay similar interest rates. They’ll even see annual payments capped at 10 percent of current income. The only difference is that their interest — roughly $7 billion a year for the next decade — will go to the feds instead of the banks. The government plans to set some of that money aside for deficit reduction, inject billions into Pell grants for low-income students and channel some of it into education initiatives like community college support.

The opponents from the private student lending industry are right: they will lose some jobs. But not all jobs. Private lenders will still complete paperwork and administer the loans. All things equal, I’d prefer this policy go into effect when unemployment wasn’t clinging to double digits. But I support the change wholeheartedly. And as the New America Foundation’s Jason Delisle told me, these private lenders don’t particularly deserve my tears: “under the pretext of competition and choice and the private sector is a smokescreen for banks who want to highjack this federal student loan program and sell kids credit card like loans when they’re least likely to know what they’re getting into. Really, these are the jobs we want to protect?”

*Update, 12:39 p.m., Obama signed the bill into law.


Thinking of getting a Masters Degree? If the GRE is required for acceptance you will see a different test in 2011.

The following was taken from The Chronicle of Higher Education:

December 6, 2009

Aspiring Graduate Students Will Face Revamped GRE in 2011.

By Josh Keller

San Francisco

The Graduate Record Examinations, the test that serves as a gatekeeper to most American graduate programs, will undergo a host of significant changes, including dropping analogy questions and introducing a new scoring scale, the Educational Testing Service announced on Friday.

The changes in the GRE general test, which testing-service officials said were the most extensive in the test’s 59-year history, will be offered starting in the fall of 2011. They were announced here at the annual meeting of the Council of Graduate Schools.

The new GRE will adopt a narrower range of possible scores, from 130 to 170 points, in order to encourage more-accurate comparisons between test takers. The existing range, from 200 to 800 points, magnifies small differences in scores that have little statistical significance, testing-service officials said.

The verbal-reasoning section of the GRE will stop using two types of questions, antonyms and analogies, that are believed to encourage excessive rote learning of vocabulary, especially among international students. Those questions will be replaced with reading-comprehension exercises, said David G. Payne, executive director of the GRE program.

“Having a good command of English vocabulary will be necessary, but it won’t be sufficient, to get a high score on the test,” Mr. Payne said.

The new test will also allow computer-based test takers to revisit previous questions within the same section, a practice that is not allowed on the current test. The test will retain an adaptive format, meaning questions can get tougher if a test taker is doing well, or easier if the test taker is doing poorly. But question difficulty will only change at the beginning of a new section of the test, not with each new question.

The entire test will take four hours, about 30 minutes longer than now. Some of the changes were proposed several years ago, but they were delayed after test takers experienced a shortage of testing sites in Europe.

Going back to school as an adult.

If  you are a working adult and you have not completed your bachelors degree now is the best time to go back to school.  Many companies offer tuition reimbursement that employees should be taking advantage of.  This is a great opportunity that should not be passed over.  These plans are great subsidies to financial aid and scholarships.  Using these resources your education costs could be lower than you think.

The thing you will want to think about if you are a manager working without a bachelors degree is this.  If  the market you are working changes and you should find yourself unemployed would you be able to replace your former level of income without a bachelors?  The sad truth is that many of today’s higher paying jobs  require a bachelors degree to even apply.

If you find that you have questions please feel free to email me or post a comment.  Being a Program Center Manager for Northwood University I work with students to help them understand tuition costs, financial aid, transferability, and degree planning.

Financial Aid:–FAFSA.gov

Grand Rapids Young Professional’s December 10th Event

Northwood will be attending the GRYP’s Holiday Unwind on December 10th at the new Peppino’s downtown G.R.

Please bring a toy for the DeVos Children’s Hospital or a $5 donation. Please, no stuffed animals.  This should be a good opportunity to do some networking and bring toy’s to some children who could use them.

The event starts at 5:30 p.m. and runs until 8:30 p.m.

See you there!

Hello world!

Hello Digital World!

My name is Brett Blythe and I am the Program Center Manager for Northwood University in Grand Rapids.  I will be using this blog to help people and prospective students learn more about Northwood University and higher education as a whole.

I hope to have a new post every week discussing events that are important to Northwood University as well as give information pertinent higher education. 

If you have questions or concerns please feel free to contact me at blytheb@northwood.edu or 616-363-2600.

Brett


May 2024
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