Saturday, January 26, 2008

Student Aid

Clemmitt, Marcia. "Student Aid." CQ Researcher 18.4 (2008): 73-96.

Will many low-income students be left out? With a record number of students hoping to attend college next year — and fees higher than ever — finding a way to pay the bills will be tough for many. Congress and the Bush administration made common cause in 2007 to increase federal Pell Grants for students and reduce some student-loan interest rates. Nevertheless, critics say the increases won't go far enough. To help middle-class families, states increasingly offer merit-based grants for college aid. But with merit scholarships replacing need-based aid, low-income and minority students — who often don't have the grades for scholarships — are finding their college dreams harder to realize. Meanwhile, longtime concern that private lenders rake in excess profits from their high-interest student loans has reached new heights. Investigations of student lending are being conducted in several states, even as universities and lenders settle allegations of loan fraud with New York's attorney general.

From the CQ Researcher. Reprinted with permission from CQ Press.


More Articles:

( student aid* or financial aid* or grants or scholarship* ) and ( need based or merit based or low-income ) -EBSCOhost, 800+ full text articles


(student aid or financial aid or SCHOLARSHIP* or grants) AND (merit based or need based or low income) -ProQuest, 5000+ full text articles

Books from the CBC Library Catalog: (costs or finance or aid or economic) and (college? or "education higher") and "united states"

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