Another Plan to Simplify Financial Aid Forms
Although the politically popular goal of financial aid simplification is getting more and more lip service lately, the reality is that financial aid applications and programs are likely to get only more complicated and frustrating, at least in the near future.
Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings made headlines this week by saying she would cut down the 10-page, 145-question Free Application for Federal Student Aid to a quick two-page, 27-question form. But she didn't say when. It won't be anytime soon. The Department of Education has already drafted the FAFSA parents and students will have to fill out starting next January, and—surprise, surprise—it is seven questions longer than this year's form. What's more, while Congress earlier this year ordered Spellings to simplify the application, Education Department officials say Congress also added requirements for new information that will probably mean even more FAFSA questions in the future about things like a student's foster care status, cooperative education earnings, and risk of homelessness.
Judith Scott-Clayton, one of the coauthors of a study that concludes that simplifying the FAFSA (by using tax information instead) could save colleges more than $2 billion and encourage more students to earn degrees, says that she and coauthor Susan Dynarski are heartened by the verbal support their ideas have received recently from both parties. But Scott-Clayton, who is a public policy Ph.D. candidate at Harvard, recognizes that simplification does have opponents. Those who give out financial aid—government officials, school financial aid administrators, and charity managers—like to ask students lots of nitty-gritty financial questions so they can direct scarce scholarship dollars to those who need them the most. "No one likes complexity, but people may have thought that complexity was a necessary evil; a trade-off for accurate targeting of aid," she says. Scott-Clayton hopes that the growing political acceptance of simplicity means that more officials have realized that "complexity doesn't have as many benefits, in terms of targeting, as one might have thought; and second, complexity is more than just an annoyance—it imposes real costs that may substantially undermine the goals of the program."
Robert Shireman, president of the the Institute for College Access and Success, says that while he's encouraged by Spellings's latest proposal, he's putting more hope in a congressionally ordered study of an even simpler idea: -Allowing parents and students to simply use their IRS filings as their financial aid application. "The goal should be to eliminate the difficult, show-stopper questions that require the applicant to do research or to be a tax expert," Shireman says. "To accomplish that goal, the department will have to go beyond this first step."
But since aid applicants will have to wait for the study, and eventual regulations, the ideal of a financial aid application on a postcard is still years away.
Tags: financial aid | U.S. Department of Education | Margaret Spellings
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Reader Comments
FAFSA
Does no one realize that the Congress dictates the questions that must appear on the FAFSA? FAFSA simplification has been an issue for at least the 30 years I have been in this business. Long before it was the FAFSA. If a simplified application is to become a reality, the law specifying what goes on the application must change.
Using IRS data has long been a powerful suggestion for increased accuracy and reduction in fraud, waste, and abuse.
Using IRS data could result in significant reduction in burden on the applicants and still provide the "nitty gritty" details that are needed to target limited aid to those who need it most.
However, until someone can change the laws it cannot happen. It is fine that the Secretary of Education can stand up and say what she would do, but the fact of the matter is that she can do little without having the necessary statutory changes.
kathy
It is not so much the LENGTH of the form, but the obvious tilt of the questions! It is geared to deny the middle class outright or drive them into loans. The "poor" get the free money. The rich, obviously, should get none.
It is ludicrous to base an upcoming year on the previous. Most Americans are worse off than last year. Every dollars from last year was spent on such trivial items as eating or gas to go to work or the roofs over their heads! Others are laid off now. And the gross amount? Do all of you get to spend your gross wage?
Most of the FAFSA is copying your tax return. This should eliminate "verification" for the supposed 1/3 who get selected(which are exactly whom, by income, race, small business or not?). Otherwise does nothing much. Also, will not help the grueling marathon of the CSS Profile which some of us must do.
Lastly, those making barely middle class wages got screwed the worst. They got more loans this year. When will they learn? Screw the middle class & the whole ship sinks!
Congress
Each year congress makes statements about making it easier, but each year they pass new laws creating terribly complex programs. They have gone from 7 questions to determine dependency status to 13! 3 of these questions are incredibly complex about the student being homeless.
I may be missing something here, but last time I checked there was a huge industry devoted to preparing taxes. I work in financial aid and I get sick to my stomach seeing what some of my students pay to have a 1040 EZ prepared.
Most of the questions asked on the FAFSA are very easy. Half of them are demographic identifiers. People think the FAFSA is terrible because everyone tells them it is. If people look at the questions one at a time, instead of all of them at once, the form is pretty manageable.
PS Kathy, you may not have noticed it, but no where on the FAFSA does it ask you your race.
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