Description: Tags: 069-Red
Description: Tags: 069-Red
Goal: To help ensure access to high-quality postsecondary education by providing financial aid in the form of grants, loans, and
work-study in an efficient, financially sound, and customer-responsive manner.
Relationship of Program to Volume 1, Department-wide Objectives: Supports Objective 3.2 (postsecondary students receive support for high-quality education) by
providing student financial aid to help low-income students enroll in and complete postsecondary education.
FY 2000—$11,233,000,000
FY 2001—$13,229,000,000 (Requested budget)
OBJECTIVE 1: ENSURE THAT LOW- AND MIDDLE-INCOME STUDENTS WILL HAVE THE SAME ACCESS TO POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION THAT HIGH-INCOME STUDENTS DO.
Indicator 1.1 Percentage of unmet need: Considering all sources of financial aid, the percentage of unmet need, especially for low-income students, will
continuously decrease.
Targets and Performance Data Assessment of Progress Sources and Data Quality
**Due to small cell sizes, income and racial groups are based on 3-year averages;
the listed year is the last year in the series. Income is divided into quintiles, with
low-income defined as the bottom quintile and high-income defined as the top
quintile.
Indicator 1.3 Targeting of Pell Grants: Pell Grant funds will continue to be targeted to those students with the greatest financial need: at least 75 percent of Pell
Grant funds will go to students below 150 percent of poverty level.
Targets and Performance Data Assessment of Progress Sources and Data Quality
The percentage of Pell Grant funds going to students below 150 percent of the Status: No 1999 data; progress toward target is Source: Pell Grant Applicant/Recipient File
poverty line likely.
Year Actual Performance Performance Targets
1996-1997: 82%
1997-1998: 80%
1998-1999: No data available 75%
1999-2000: 75%
2000-2001: 75%
OBJECTIVE 2: ENSURE THAT MORE STUDENTS WILL PERSIST IN POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION AND ATTAIN DEGREES AND CERTIFICATES.
Indicator 2.1 Completion rate: Completion rates for all full-time, degree-seeking students in 4-year and 2-year colleges will improve, while the gap in completion
rates between minority and non-minority students will decrease.
Targets and Performance Data Assessment of Progress Sources and Data Quality
The percentage of full-time, degree-seeking students completing a 4-year degree Status: No 1999 data; progress cannot be judged Source: Graduation Rate Survey (GRS)
within 6 years, and those completing a 2-year degree, earning a certificate, or a until trend data are available. conducted as part of the Integrated
degree that requires transferring to a 4-year school within 3 years. Postsecondary Student Aid Study (IPEDS).
4-year rate
Year Actual Performance Performance Targets
Total Black White Hispanic
1997: 53% 36% 56% 39%
Difference: 20% & 17%
1999: No data available Continuing increase in
rate
2000: Continuing increase in rate
2001: Continuing increase in rate
OBJECTIVE 3: ENSURE THAT TAXPAYERS WILL HAVE A POSITIVE RETURN ON INVESTMENT IN THE FEDERAL STUDENT FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS.
Indicator 3.1 Return on investment: The benefits of the student aid programs, in terms of increased tax revenues, will continue to exceed their costs.
Targets and Performance Data Assessment of Progress Sources and Data Quality
Year Actual Performance Performance Targets Status: Target exceeded. Source: March Current Population Survey (CPS)
Low Best High and Beginning Postsecondary Student (BPS)
1996: $1.40 $3.03 $7.15 study with imputations from the National
1997: $1.42 $3.08 $7.27 Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS) and
1998: $1.46 $3.16 $7.49 High School and Beyond (HS&B). Behavioral
1999: $1.54 $3.36 $7.97 No target set assumptions were derived, where feasible, from
2000: Greater than $1 meta-analyses conducted by Leslie and
2001: Greater than $1 Brinkman in their 1988 book, The Economic
Low: A pessimistic set of assumptions leading to a low-end estimate of the return on Value of Higher Education.
investment. Frequency: Annually.
Best: The set of assumptions that we believe best captures the return on investment. Next Update: 2000.
High: An optimistic set of assumptions leading to a high-end estimate of the return
on investment. Validation Procedure: Verified by ED data
attestation process.
KEY STRATEGIES
Strategies Continued from 1999
If enacted, the Department’s FY 2001 budget would provide more than $54 billion in grant, loan, and work-study assistance to 8.6 million postsecondary students.
- An $8.4 billion request for Pell Grants would increase the maximum award by $200 to $3,500, the highest ever and more than 50 percent higher than the maximum grant in 1993,
and
would provide grants to nearly 3.9 million students.
- A $1,011 million request for Work-Study (an increase of $77 million) would allow approximately 1 million students to work their way through college.
- The FY 2001 budget provides a $60 million increase (to $691 million) for Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, the largest increase in 10 years. The grants will serve an
estimated 1.2 million students.
- The Federal Family Education Loans and Federal Direct Student Loan programs would provide 9.4 million loans totaling an estimated $43 billion in funds available to support
postsecondary students.
INDICATOR CHANGES
From FY 1999 Annual plan (two years old)
Adjusted—None.
Dropped—None.
From FY 2000 Annual Plan (last year’s)
Adjusted
Indicator 1.4, the Federal debt burden indicator, was changed from looking at the percentage of borrowers with debt burdens in excess of 10 percent to median debt burden being less
than 10 percent to better reflect conditions being faced by “typical” borrowers.
A comparison of low- and high-income students was dropped from Indicator 2.1 because the data source now being used for this indicator, which is available on an annual basis
rather then every 8 years as was the prior data source, does not contain information on income.
Dropped
Indicator 3.1, the employment rate indicator, which compared the rate at which student aid recipients obtained jobs with that of nonrecipients, was eliminated because it was felt that
the return on investment indicator better measured the economic effects of the student aid programs and the employment rate indicator could be updated only every 4 to 8 years.
New—None.