Rachel Fishman
Director, Higher Education
Last June, New America and uAspire co-authored Decoding the Cost of College, a report about the difficult process students and families face when navigating their financial aid award letters. Along with analyzing over 11,000 financial aid packages that students received, we took a closer look at the formatting practices of over 500 individual letters from different colleges and universities. We found that the way in which colleges and universities communicate price and aid makes it exceedingly difficult for students and families to make financially-informed college decisions.
Today, Senators Grassley (R-IA), Smith (D-MN), and Ernst (R-IA) introduced the “Understanding the True Cost of College Act” which aims to help students and families navigate financial aid offers by requiring that all colleges and universities use a standardized template when communicating aid.
The Understanding the True Cost of College Act was first introduced by Senator Franken (D-MN) in 2012. This year, there have been several changes to the bill, building off of the growing body of research about award letters that has unveiled common and problematic practices such as using confusing jargon and terminology; omitting price information and inconsistently doing bottom-line math for students; not differentiating different types of aid such as loans and grants; making packages seem like they go further than they do by including Parent PLUS loans; and not delineating clear next steps about how to unlock aid.
The bill seeks to address these practices in part by requiring colleges and universities to:
The re-introduction also reduced a number of duplicative disclosures to ensure the most salient information rises to the top, require a larger group of stakeholders to develop the templates, and engage in longer and more intensive consumer testing–including a pilot program at multiple colleges and universities of every sector.
Improving how we communicate financial aid offers is a no-brainer. And the solutions are low-hanging fruit: a standard financial aid offer for all students and standardized terms when communicating aid. This bipartisan bill is a move in the right direction to finally provide that elusive decoder ring for students and families trying to understand how much college will cost.
Read the full text of the bill here.
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