The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) works to shape the future by promoting student access and success in higher education.
The House Appropriations Committee released its 2027 budget proposal, which would cut funding for Federal Work-Study and FSEOG programs, increase the maximum Pell Grant award by $50, and eliminate funding for subsidized federal student loans.
Learn more: https://t.co/rCFbj08OAc
If your financial aid office has run into any reprocessed ISIRs with comment code 352 and a corresponding C-Flag, then today's new episode of "Off The Cuff" is for you: https://t.co/5HWEbdIX3O
#NASFAAinTheNews: "We're seeing the repercussions of the short timelines to implement the rules from OBBBA," said Karen McCarthy, VP for public policy & federal relations at NASFAA. "Usually we have eight months...But this year was May 19, six weeks before July."
If your med or vet school told you that you've hit the new Grad PLUS borrowing cap, double-check. The Department of Education's grandfathering flag didn't populate when the system went live. Lots of grandfathered students are being flagged incorrectly.
https://t.co/9yhSrmLcHh
While adults continue to link college degrees to career success, many adults don’t believe students have access to quality, affordable higher education, a new report from @Gallup and @LuminaFound found: https://t.co/ryFu1q8X7T
Are community colleges being treated as a public good or are they being quietly repackaged as workforce pipelines, patched together through employer partnerships, competitive grants, and the ingenuity of presidents who have learned to do more with less? https://t.co/DtxMqMelug
The Department of Education issued an electronic announcement on Friday with several best practices institutions should consider to prevent fraud in federal student assistance programs: https://t.co/mE61KNqrfY
#NASFAAinTheNews: "'These are the most changes we have seen at this scale in a very long time,' said Sarah Austin, a policy analyst at the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, a nonprofit membership organization."
This week on “Off the Cuff,” Allie is joined by Rachel and Sheila, NASFAA’s prison education specialist, to discuss the landscape of prison education programs (PEP). Sheila, who is retiring this month, shares her perspective on the past and future of PEP: https://t.co/HpyMK7S6ZD
Why Advocates Want a $200 Increase to the Pell Grant
Higher ed groups say the grant has lost purchasing power amid inflation. But getting any increase through Congress will be a hard sell as lawmakers grapple with the program’s $17 million shortfall. https://t.co/BDllRNjDOV
What the Education Department Projects for Workforce Pell
The @usedgov estimates Workforce Pell could benefit over 100,000 students in the second year of the program. Experts say implementation will start slow but ramp up. https://t.co/KZc2t61mbm
How does college pricing affect trust in #highered? Join leaders from ACE, @nasfaa, AACRAO, @stradaeducation, and the Enrollment Management Advisory Group this afternoon at 3 p.m. ET to discuss new research and insights for improving transparency. https://t.co/sQyb9odwhM
The Department of Education released a FAQ document addressing the new loan limits established under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which take effect July 1, 2026.
We summarized what financial aid professionals need to know: https://t.co/VGms1M7VXr
This week on "Off The Cuff,"🎙️Hugh is joined by Norma, David Tolman, and David Futrell to discuss the schedule of reductions (SOR).
🎧Listen to the episode on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and on our website: https://t.co/StLjw4StF8
A group of three senators on Tuesday introduced companion legislation aimed at preventing federal student aid fraud by targeting “ghost students,” dubbed the Student Aid Fraud Oversight and Accountability Act. Learn more: https://t.co/uWIe3gSVmm
A coalition of 25 states sued the Department of Education over its final rule implementing new student loan limits, claiming that this rule will price many students out of entering the healthcare workforce and harm public higher education institutions: https://t.co/uXzsaCrXKi
Only about a third of Americans now believe a four-year degree is worth the cost. As many colleges face shrinking enrollment, some are offering students a faster path to graduation. https://t.co/YHnwgHX22f
NASFAA's comments to the Department of Education on the proposed regulations for changes related to the institutional accountability framework address data quality concerns, authority to impose institution-wide Title IV eligibility loss, and more: https://t.co/sEc6qZh6Mn
Strada’s latest report, The Price Transparency Imperative, shows that the misconceptions held by many Americans about the actual price of college have had a significant impact on the public’s trust in postsecondary education.
https://t.co/XKKblFbt5f
The Department of Education released its final rule covering the Pell Grant changes made in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. NASFAA policy experts break down what financial aid professionals need to know: https://t.co/5uU8hw6Za6