My school has closed and lost eligibility to
receive federal student aid funds from ED.
This change in ownership has no immediate impact on your ability to continue your studies at your school or to
receive federal student aid funds from the U.S. Department of Education (ED).
My school has lost eligibility to
receive federal student aid funds from the U.S. Department of Education (ED).
Not exact matches
According to the Higher Education Act (HEA) of 1965, all institutions
receiving Title IV
funds must submit specific data about their educational programs,
student population, enrollment, attrition, and completion rates, staff and faculty, financial information, tuition and fees, and allocation of all
student financial
aid (NCES, n.d.) IPEDS HistoryIn 1995, NCES established the National Postsecondary Education Cooperative (NPEC) as a «voluntary organization that encompasses all sectors of the postsecondary education community including
federal agencies, postsecondary institutions, associations, and other organizations interested in postsecondary education data collection» (NPEC, n.d., p. 4).
Programs serving the nation's economically disadvantaged
students and those with disabilities are
receiving massive
funding boosts through the
federal stimulus package — $ 13 billion for Title I
aid and $ 11.3 billion for special education — but how school districts choose to use the money may set them up for problems when it dries up.
Each participating school
receives a certain amount of FSEOG
funds each year from the U.S. Department of Education's office of
Federal Student Aid.
The disbursement of more
federal student aid funds to a
student than he or she is eligible to
receive.
ITT will be held responsible for any return of
federal student aid funds which were due to
students and had been
received, but not earned, prior to closure.