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1) To receive campus-based aid, students must meet general eligibility requirements including having an official Expected Family Contribution. Schools must develop selection procedures that are uniformly applied and kept on file. 2) Undergraduate, graduate, and professional students are eligible for Perkins Loans and Federal Work Study. Only undergraduates without a bachelor's degree are eligible for FSEOG. 3) Schools must make campus funds reasonably available to all eligible students who demonstrate need, with some programs requiring exceptional financial need.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
45 views

Description: Tags: Vol4Ch1

1) To receive campus-based aid, students must meet general eligibility requirements including having an official Expected Family Contribution. Schools must develop selection procedures that are uniformly applied and kept on file. 2) Undergraduate, graduate, and professional students are eligible for Perkins Loans and Federal Work Study. Only undergraduates without a bachelor's degree are eligible for FSEOG. 3) Schools must make campus funds reasonably available to all eligible students who demonstrate need, with some programs requiring exceptional financial need.

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Selecting Recipients CHAPTER

GENERAL ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS General Eligibility Requirements


All students receiving campus-based aid must meet the general Cite
eligibility requirements listed in Volume 1 - Student Eligibility. Additional 34 CFR 668.32
student eligibility requirements under each campus-based program are
discussed in the respective volumes for each program.

A student enrolled as an undergraduate, graduate, or professional


student is eligible to receive assistance from the Federal Perkins Loan
and Federal Work-Study (FWS) programs. Only undergraduate
students who do not have a baccalaureate or first professional
degree are eligible to receive Federal Supplemental Education
Opportunity Grants (FSEOG’s).

In choosing aid recipients, a school must develop written selection


procedures that are uniformly applied and that are kept on file at the
school. A school must make campus-based funds reasonably
available—to the extent of available funds—to all eligible students who
demonstrate financial need. (Two of the campus-based programs, the
Federal Perkins Loan and FSEOG programs, require eligible students
to have exceptional financial need.) A school is reminded that no
payment of a campus-based award can be made if the student did not
receive an official Expected Family Contribution (EFC).

FURTHER UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE


A student who has earned a bachelor’s or first professional degree
is eligible to receive aid from the Federal Perkins Loan or FWS
program to pursue an additional undergraduate degree. However, a
student who has earned a bachelor’s or first professional degree is not
eligible to receive an FSEOG to pursue another undergraduate
degree.

TEACHER CERTIFICATION PROGRAMS


A school may award a Federal Perkins Loan and/or FWS to a
student who is enrolled or accepted for enrollment at an eligible

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Vol. 4 — Campus-Based Common Provisions, 2000-2001

school on at least a half-time basis in a program that is required by a


state for a professional credential or certificate for employment as an
elementary or secondary teacher in that state. A student is not allowed
to receive aid to cover optional courses that he or she may elect to take
for professional recognition or advancement or additional optional
courses recommended or required by the school. The school should
document that the courses the student enrolls in are required by the
state for teacher certification.

A student enrolled in a teacher certification program may be


considered either an undergraduate or graduate student, depending
on the school’s policy. That decision is left to the school. Information
about Perkins Loan limits for students in teacher certification
programs is included in Volume 5 - Perkins Loans.

LESS-THAN-FULL-TIME AND INDEPENDENT STUDENTS


Effective October 1, 1998, if a school’s FSEOG, FWS, or Federal
Reasonable Proportion Cites Perkins Loan allocation is directly or indirectly based in part on the
34 CFR 674.10(b) financial need of less-than-full-time or independent students, then a
34 CFR 675.10(c)
school is required to offer a reasonable proportion of its FSEOG
allocation, its FWS allocation, and the dollar amount of the loans
made from its Perkins revolving fund to such students. Previously, a
school was required to offer such students at least 5 percent of the
funds if the need of all of these students exceeded 5 percent of the
total need of all students at the school. For purposes of this
requirement, schools are expected to have reasonable packaging
policies for awarding campus-based funds. A policy of exclusion for
less-than-full-time or independent students would not be acceptable.

Part-time students include correspondence students. To be


considered enrolled in a program of correspondence study, the
student must be enrolled in a degree-seeking program and must have
completed and submitted the first lesson. A school must offer a
reasonable proportion of its FSEOG allocation, its FWS allocation, and
the dollar amount of the loans made from its Perkins revolving fund to
part-time students on its eligible branch campuses as well as to part-
time students on the home campus.

SPECIAL SESSIONS
A student who enrolls as a regular student in an eligible program
during a special session, such as summer school, may receive campus-
based aid if he or she meets the same general eligibility requirements
that apply to a student enrolled in a regular session. If a student is not
enrolled during the special session, the student is not eligible to
receive campus-based aid during the period of nonattendance, except
in the case of an FWS job, which may be awarded only if the student
attended the school during the preceding term or has been accepted
by the school for the subsequent term. (See Volume 6 - Federal Work
Study.)

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