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Financial aid for students continuing on to higher
education has been around longer than you think. From the first university
scholarship awarded in 1643, to present day, discover the highlights of
financial aid throughout American history.
|
1643 |
First
scholarship Awarded at Harvard University Funds provided by a private
donor, Lady Anne Radcliffe Mowlson. |
|
1787 |
Northwest
Ordinance |
|
1862 |
Land Grant
(Morrill) Act
On July 2,
1862, a land grant bill, introduced by Representative Justin Smith
Morrill of Vermont, was signed by Abraham Lincoln. American colleges
benefited from the provisions of the Morrill Act. It gave to the states
federal lands for the establishment of colleges offering programs in
agriculture, engineering, and home economics as well as in the
traditional academic subjects. The colleges established on these former
federal lands are often called "Land Grant Colleges."
Another
provision of the Morrill Act called for the establishment of a
military training program, now part of the Reserve Officers' Training
Corps (ROTC), at every land-grant college. Although the law did not
require compulsory participation, nearly every state made it so by the
1920s After World War II, however, participation in ROTC was generally
on an elective basis. |
|
1887 |
Hatch Act
The Hatch Act
of 1887 expanded the land-grant program by providing federal funds for
the creation of agricultural experiment stations for scientific
research. |
|
1890 |
Second
Morrill Act |
|
1914 |
Smith-Lever
Act |
|
1919 |
Rehabilitation Act |
|
1944 |
GI Bill
On June 22,
1944, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Servicemen's
Readjustment Act of 1944, better known as the GI Bill of Rights. This
law was very controversial at the time but has since been recognized
as one of the most important acts of Congress The GI Bill had the
secondary impact of popularizing the idea that large numbers of people
could benefit from a college education1. |
|
1950s |
With the
growth of endowments and scholarship funds at colleges across the
United States in the early 1950s it became necessary for most
institutions to develop their own formula for the distribution of
those funds. |
|
1954 |
The
College Scholarship Service (CSS) was founded by a cluster of 95
private colleges and universities located in the northeastern section
of the country. This group developed a standard need analysis system
to determine the financial need of student applicants. The system
established criteria to measure college students and their families'
ability to contribute to their education based on family income and
assets They developed a form to collect information from students and
collected a fee from students for each college to which the
information was sent.
The CSS need
analysis system became the established method of allocating need-based
aid. |
|
1956 |
Initially
need was determined using the work of Rexford Moon from a New York
headquarters based on early efforts into need analysis on the work of
John Munro, Director of Financial Aid at Harvard. The Harvard system
of measuring need had been refined by groups of Western colleges and
universities, which developed common procedures and forms for
analysis. A group of eastern institutions then brought about a similar
process of refinement, and by 1956 a tentative national system,
developed by the higher education community for use in awarding
institutional aid, was in place.
Regardless of
motives, the establishment of a system based upon measuring the
student's or his family's ability to pay for the cost of education
provided the beginning of a philosophy that aid should be awarded on
the basis of need. The system also provided for financial aid
administrators to meet together.
The College
Scholarship Service was the dominant group in the early training and
association activities of the members of a newly emerging branch of
higher education administration2. |
|
1957 |
Sputnik
Launched
In the decade
after World War II, while the economy was adjusting to meet an
unprecedented peacetime prosperity and the population was rapidly
expanding, there was little public demand for the federal government
to become involved in assisting students seeking a college education.
However, in
1957, an external event dramatically changed a complacent public
attitude toward government involvement in aid to education. The Soviet
launching of Sputnik in the fall of that year evoked an outcry from
the American people, who were culturally unprepared to be second-best
in anything — especially second to the Russians in outer space.
Congress
swiftly denied any responsibility for the apparent American
inferiority blaming our educational system "The real problem lay in
the weakness of the American education system and would require a new
dynamic and total commitment to the problems facing higher education3." |
|
1958 |
National
Defense Education Act (NDEA)
This
legislation provided aid to education in the United States at all
levels, public and private, stimulated the advancement of education in
science, mathematics, and modern foreign languages, provided aid in
other areas as well, including technical education, area studies,
geography, English as a second language, counseling and guidance,
school libraries and librarianship, and educational media centers,
provided institutions of higher education with 90% of capital funds
for low-interest loans to students, gave federal support for
improvement in elementary and secondary education, contained statutory
prohibitions of federal direction, supervision, or control over the
curriculum, program of institutions, administration or personnel of
any educational institution, and established the National Defense
Student Loan Program (NDSL).
This student
loan program offered long-term, low-interest loans to qualified
students, first in the targeted fields of mathematics, science, and
foreign languages, and later in all academic majors. The National
Defense Student Loan Program was later renamed the National Direct
Student Loan Program (NDSL). Today it is known as the Federal Perkins
Loan Program. |
|
1960s |
By the early
1960s the College Scholarship Service (and its parent organization,
the College Entrance Examination Board), had developed influence over
national policy, as had the umbrella presidential higher education
association, the American Council on Education (ACE).
The EOG
Program was the first federal grant program providing federal student
assistance in the form of gift aid that, unlike loans, did not have to
be repaid, and, unlike College Work-Study, did not have to be earned
through work. This program was intended to help the neediest students.
EOG Program
was later renamed the Supplemental Education Opportunity Grant Program
(SEOG) and then renamed the Federal Supplemental Education Opportunity
Grant (FSEOG). |
|
1964 |
Economic
Opportunity Act
The Economic
Opportunity Act signed into law on August 20, 1964, by President
Lyndon B. Johnson recognized that education was crucial to fight the
nation's War on Poverty.
This
legislation created the College Work-Study Program (now known as the
Federal Work-Study Program) which gave federal funds to schools so
they could provide needy students with part time employment
opportunities while pursuing their college degree.
Although
designed primarily to combat poverty wherever it existed in the United
States, this act directly affected higher education in a number of
ways. It not only involved colleges and universities in the
administration and operation of such programs as Head Start, Upward
Bound, Vista, and Job Corps, but also made available a combination
work-study program for economically deprived college students, which
later was transferred to the Office of Education4. |
|
1965 |
Higher
Education Act
The Higher
Education Act of 1965, which has been amended many times since it was
enacted, forms the basis of current law authorizing the federal
student aid programs. The student aid programs administered by the
U.S. Department of Education are contained in Title IV of the HEA,
which is why they are referred to as "Title IV Programs." This
comprehensive piece of higher education legislation established
federal scholarships for needy undergraduate students and made
provision for government insurance on private loans to students It
consolidated laws authorizing the National Defense Student Loan
Program and the College Work-Study Program, created two new programs:
the Educational Opportunity Grant Program and the Guaranteed Student
Loan Program. |
|
1970s |
In the 1970s,
due to the coming of age of the baby boomer generation, the college
population increased significantly. Many needy students were unable to
attend post-secondary institutions because of limited funds and also
due to an uneven distribution of campus-based funds.
Funds for the
campus-based programs are generally very limited. And, a student's
ability to receive funds to meet his or her need for attendance at a
particular institution had always been based on whether that school
hadfunds available to offer an award. |
|
1972 |
Higher
Education Amendments (Reauthorization)
The Higher
EducationAmendments responded to the disparity of funding among
institutions by creating in the Basic Opportunity Grant Program, known
as the BEOG Program or "Basic Grant." This program is now known as the
Federal Pell Grant Program.
Basic Grants
were intended to serve as the "floor" or "foundation" of an
undergraduate student's financial aid package. Other financial aid, to
theextent that it was available, would be added to the Basic Grant up
to the limit of a student's financial need.
The BEOG
Program introduced the concept of portability in the federal student
financial aid programs. As opposed to Campus-Based Aid, where the
College makes the determination of which students will receive funding
and in what amounts. By providing portability, BEOG offered students
not only access to post-secondary education; but, for the first time
choice among institutions.
Most changes
to the federal student aid program result from a process called
"reauthorization". Through the process of reauthorization, Congress
examines the status of each program and decides whether to continue
that program, and whether a continued program requires changes in
structure or purpose The campus-based programs have been reauthorized
every five or six years beginning in 1972.
The Higher
Education Amendments of 1972:
-
Reauthorized the three campus-based programs;
-
Renamed the
National Defense Student Loan Program as the National Direct Student
Loan Program;
-
Renamed the
Economic Opportunity Grant Program the Supplemental Educational
Opportunity Grant Program (SEOG);
-
Proprietary
(profit-making) schools became eligible to use Title IV Funds; and
-
The
Educational Opportunity Grant Program would no longer function as a
stand-alone program of gift aid, but instead would be linked with
the Basic Grant Program.
|
|
1975 |
National Task
Force on Student Aid Problems. The Task Force was chaired by
Francis Keppel and became known as the Keppel Task Force. |
|
1976 |
Higher
Education Amendments
The 1976 HEA
reauthorized all existing federal student financial aid programs,
required that students make satisfactory academic progress to receive
Title IV funds, introduced student consumer-information provisions
requiring participating institutions to provide information on topics
such as academic progress, job placement for graduates, and financial
aid policies and procedures. |
|
1978 |
Middle Income
Student Assistance Act (MISAA)
This
legislation eliminated all income restrictions for the Guaranteed
Student Loan Program (GSL), which effectively extended eligibility to
middle and upper-middle income students. MISSA also expanded
eligibility for BEOG for these same students. |
|
1979 |
Higher
Education Technical Act
Authorized
the "Commissioner" of Education (now the Secretary of Education) to
collect defaulted National Direct Student Loans on behalf of
institutions. This provision was significant particularly for state
institutions that previously were unable to "assign" such loans to the
Department for collection because of state laws barring the assignment
of state assets. |
|
1980 |
Higher
Education Amendments
Congress
sought to honor the work of a man whose long term advocacy and support
of programs that legislated increased federal funding made college a
reality for millions of students. Accordingly, the Higher Education
Amendments of 1980 renamed the Basic Education Opportunity Grant
Program the Pell Grant Program after Rhode Island's Senior Senator
Claiborne Pell.
As a result
of the 1980 Amendments the Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students
(PLUS) Program was also established. Middle-income families were now
able to borrow $3,000 a year for each dependent child in school
regardless of parent income. |
|
1981 |
Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA)
Congress
reversed the trend toward greater and greater expansion of student
loan eligibility by imposing a new need test to limit student loan
interest subsidies to applicants with family income below $30,000. |
|
1982 |
Defense
Authorization Acts of 1982 and 1983
A new
requirement was imposed that men between the ages 18 to 25 be
registered with the Selective Service in order to be eligible for
federal student assistance. |
|
1985 |
Balance
Budget and Emerging Deficit Control Act
In an effort
to cut costs, Congress passed the Balanced Budget and Emergency
Deficit Control Act of 1985, better known as Gramm-Rudman-Hollings.
This law provided that, if specific levels of deficit reduction were
not achieved within specific time frames, rescissions must be made to
the funding of most federal programs — including student aid programs. |
|
1986 |
Higher
Education Amendments of 1986
Restricted
eligibility for federal educational loans by requiring all applicants
for Guaranteed Student Loans to demonstrate financial need for the
interest subsidy, regardless of income, limited the PLUS Loan Program
to parent borrowers eliminating graduate students and independent
undergraduate students, created the Supplemental Loan to Students (SLS)
to provide loans to graduate and professional students and independent
undergraduate students, established limits on duration of student's
eligibility for Pell Grant funds, restricting such eligibility to a
specified number of years of full-time enrollment, linked Pell Grants
and SEOG, by giving Pell Grant recipients priority for the SEOG, gave
student financial aid administrators broader authority to exercise
their professional judgment in all the Title IV programs to reflect a
student's exceptional circumstances, changed the name of the National
Direct Student Loan Program to the Perkins Loan Program in honor of
the late Congressman
Carl
D. Perkins, a long time advocate of student aid. |
|
1987 |
Between 1987
and the next reauthorization of the Higher Education Act in 1992,
Congress used the method of appropriations several times to make
one-year cost-reduction changes, primarily in the Pell Grant Program.
Specifically, Congress eliminated the applicability of professional
judgment to the Pell Grant Program and rescinded Pell Grant
eligibility for less-than half-time students in order to reduce costs. |
|
1988 |
The
Supplemental Loans to Students Reform Bill |
|
1989 |
The Student
Loan Reconciliation Amendments |
|
1990 |
The Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act |
|
1992 |
Higher
Education Amendments
-
Mandated
sole use of a single, free application for Title IV funds (Free
Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA);
-
Mandated a
single need analysis methodology, called the Federal Need Analysis;
-
Methodology
(FM), and a single set of cost of attendance components;
-
Established
a statutory definition of an academic year with a minimum number of
hours and weeks;
-
Required
pro-ration of Federal Pell Grants and Stafford Loans for
undergraduate students enrolled in programs that do not meet the
statutory definition of an academic year, as well as for
undergraduate students enrolled in a remaining portion of an
academic year;
-
Mandated
development of a common FFEL application and promissory note, and a
common form for processing FFEL deferments;
-
Mandated
standardization in FFEL lenders and guarantor forms and procedures;
-
Required
negotiated rulemaking for Part B (FFEL Program), Part G (General
Provisions), and Part H (Program Integrity) of the Higher Education
Act;
-
Changed the
names of the loan programs. The Guaranteed Student Loan Programs had
often been (and still are) referred to as the "Part B" Programs,
because they are addressed in part B of Title IV of the Higher
Education Act. The 1992 HEA renamed the Part B Loans as a group to
the "Federal Family Education Loan Program" or the FFEL Program. The
Guaranteed Student Loan Program itself was renamed the Federal
Stafford Loan Program in honor of Senator
Stafford;
-
Increased
annual and aggregate loan limits while PLUS loan limits were
eliminated;
-
Created a
separate Federal Unsubsidized Stafford Loan Program for students who
did not qualify for a subsidized loan, or whose subsidized
eligibility was limited to borrow additional funds;
-
Authorized
a new William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Demonstration Program,
designed to permit a small group of schools to offer loans similar
to those under the Federal Family Education Loan Program and allowed
the Department of Education to provide students loans directly
through schools rather than through private lenders;
-
Changed the
structure of loan limits under the Federal Perkins Loan Program;
-
Enhanced
the purpose of the Federal Work-Study program by adding a community
service requirement; and
-
Eliminated
financial restraints on eligibility for less-than-half-time.
As a result
of the 1992 HEA mandate for a free financial aid application and
federal methodology for need analysis, there was no longer a need for
the CSS financial aid application. Some institutions were
philosophically opposed to the changes in need analysis adopted by
Congress. For example, many opposed the decision to exclude home
equity as a factor in determining ability to pay. As a result, CSS
developed the Profile, a supplement to the government's free
application, which many private schools use to award private funding. |
|
1993 |
The Student
Loan Reform Act of 1993 made conforming adjustments to certain areas
of the Federal Family Education Loan Program to comply with the Direct
Loan Program. Legislation in 1993 repealed the Supplemental Loans to
Students Program and increased limits on unsubsidized loans Congress
also reaffirmed the use of professional judgment in the Federal Pell
Grant Program. |
|
1997 |
Authorizations under section 443(b)(5) of the Higher Education Act of
1964, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2753(b)(5)), made it possible for the
Secretary to allow an increase in the Federal share of compensation
for FWS students to exceed 75%, if required in furtherance and
purposes of the program. Effective with the "America Reads Challenge"
of the 1997–98 award class=GramE>year, the Secretary waived the FWS
institutional-share requirement for reading tutors of children from
infancy through elementary school. Federal funding for FWS students
working as reading tutors would be 100%.
The Tax Payer
Relief Act established new tax credits were made available for higher
education expenses including the HOPE Scholarship Tax Credit which
gave up to $1,500 of credit for each of the first two years of
college, and Lifetime Learning Tax Credits The law also allowed
interest paid on qualified education loans to be tax deductible,
taxpayers were allowed to contribute annually to an educational IRA
for each child under 18, and penalty-free withdrawals from existing
IRAs for higher education expenses were allowed. The act also allowed
greater flexibility for families saving in qualified state pre-paid
tuition plans, an income exclusion for up to $5,250 in employer
education benefits, and tax-free loan forgiveness for certain
community service. |
|
1998 |
Higher
Education Amendments
Established
Performance Based Organization (PBO) to improve student aid delivery
system. President Bill Clinton signed into law P.L. #105-244, the
Higher Education Amendments of 1998 on October 7, 1998. This
legislation:
-
Raised the
maximum authorized funding levels for the Federal Pell Grant;
-
Expanded
eligibility by increasing the income protection allowances in the
formulas used to determine a student's eligibility;
-
Provided
that students attending schools that lose their eligibility to
participate in the FFEL or Direct Loan program because of high
default rates are not eligible for Pell Grants; and
-
Extended
Pell Grants to certain post-baccalaureate students who are preparing
to teach.
In 1998–99,
the Secretary added a waiver of the institutional-share requirement to
extend to students employed as tutors in a family literacy program
that provides literacy services to children from infancy through
elementary school or to their parents or caregivers. |
|
1999 |
America
Counts. Effective, July 1999, the Secretary provided an additional
waiver for students working as mathematics tutors for children who are
in elementary school through the ninth grade. This waiver is an
attempt to address the need to improve student achievement in
mathematics. At this time, 36 percent of fourth graders and 38 percent
of eighth graders score below the basic level in mathematics. The
Third International Math and Science Study shows that, while U.S.
students perform above the international average in mathematics at the
fourth-grade level, by the eighth grade, relative performance is below
the international average. |
1McCormick, J.L. (1972).
Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2.
2Brooks. NASFAA The First
Twenty Years, p. 12-13.
3McCormick, J.L. (1972).
Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2.
4de Gruyter, W. (1992).
American Universities and Colleges, 14th Ed.
Special thanks to Ms. Mary Keesee, of the University of
North Carolina at Wilmington, who contributed her research notes for this
page.
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