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College Choice: Consumer Information Tools

College Choice: Consumer Information Tools.

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College Choice: Consumer Information Tools

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  1. College Choice: Consumer Information Tools • On June 5, Vice President Biden, Secretary Duncan, CFPB Director Cordray and College Presidents met with colleges and universities that committed to financial aid transparency to provide students and their families with the clear, useful information to make the best decisions about where to enroll and what kind of financial commitment they are taking on with their investment in higher education.  • Each institution represented participants at the meeting committed to providing the following information in one easy-to-understand place, to all incoming students as part of their financial aid package beginning with the 2013-2014 school year: • How much one year of college will cost; • Financial aid options to pay this cost, with a clear differentiation between grants and scholarships, which do not have to be repaid, and loans, which do; • Net costs after grants and scholarships are taken into account; • Estimated monthly payments for the federal student loans the student would likely owe after graduation; and • Vital information about student results, including comparative information about the rates at which students enroll from one year to the next, graduate, and repay their loans without defaulting on their obligations.

  2. College Choice: Consumer Information Tools • 5 key data elements include: • net price, • graduation rates, • default (or repayment) rates; • mean and median debt; and • employment outcomes. ED produced Institution produced Private Sector or Gov’t * Existing

  3. “Know Before You Owe” (DRAFT) Institution must use this form for service members and veterans if they sign on to the principles of excellence but our preference would before them to use this type of form for all students. Current “graduation rate survey” as reported to the National Center for Education Statistics under IPEDS Current “cohort default rate” as calculated by the Department The form would include all required data elements and be in a consistent format. Also, the information contained on the form would need to be in an open, downloadable, machine-readable format that could be easily imported into a comparison tool that could be developed by the private sector or the Federal government.

  4. MyData Initiative • Providing student data in machine-readable format • MyData files from ED: • NSLDS data • SAR (FAFSA) data • MyData files from 3rdparty vendors: • A number of vendors, including Pearson, eScholar, Parchment, and Microsoft have voluntarily committed to provide students data via MyData buttons. • MyDataspec: www.MyDataDownload.org

  5. Links to Background Information • President’s Blueprint for Keeping College Affordable • http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/01/27/fact-sheet-president-obama-s-blueprint-keeping-college-affordable-and-wi • Informing Consumers Through Smart Disclosure • http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2012/03/30/informing-consumers-through-smart-disclosure • The Power of Open Education Data • http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2012/06/08/power-open-education-data-0

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