System-wide
Effort will Help Students Stay in School & Earn A Degree
SUNY
Becomes First in Nation to Adopt Federal Financial Aid Shopping Sheet
New York City – State
University of New York Chancellor Nancy L. Zimpher and the SUNY Board of
Trustees today announced the “SUNY Smart Track Campaign” to combat student debt
throughout New York and set a national model as college students across the
country are taking on more loan debt than ever before.
The SUNY campaign is the most
proactive, comprehensive approach by any university system in the U.S. to
address a growing national concern about the lack of transparency as it relates
to college costs and financial aid, and the amount of federal loan debt
accumulated by today’s college students.
“We do not want New York
State students attending our public colleges, incurring debt, and leaving
campus without a degree,” said New York State Governor Andrew M. Cuomo. “I know
firsthand from my investigations as Attorney General into the student loan
industry both how vital this money is for students and how tricky this system
can be to navigate. SUNY Smart Track is an innovative, forward-thinking effort
to help college students understand the realities of financial aid. I commend
Chancellor Zimpher and the Board of Trustees for tackling the student debt
crisis here in New York and throughout the nation.”
SUNY Smart Track will reduce
debt among students at the system’s 64 colleges and universities by providing
students, parents, and campuses with new tools and services to help educate
students from the earliest stage, as they are deciding how much to borrow,
engaging those at the highest risk for default throughout their time on campus,
and working with all student borrowers to help them complete their degrees and
obtain a job after graduation that will enable them to pay off their student
loans.
“Student debt has surpassed
credit card debt in America, and more and more students are defaulting on their
loans each year,” said SUNY Board Chairman H. Carl McCall. “Smart Track will
help SUNY to better educate students and parents about the costs of college,
help them plan financially for the future, and increase their chances to stay
in school and earn a degree.”
“On behalf of our students
and their families, we simply must do a better job to ensure that college costs
are transparent, financial aid opportunities are outlined clearly and
comprehensively, and students are only borrowing what they need and what they
can afford,” said SUNY Chancellor Nancy L. Zimpher. “Smart Track puts SUNY on
pace to lead the nation in reducing student debt and creating a more
financially sound future for our students and alumni.”
By resolution at today’s
Board meeting, SUNY Trustees launched the campaign at six pilot campuses for
the 2012-13 school year, with a charge to all 64 campuses of SUNY to adopt
Smart Track by Fall 2013. The campaign includes the following tools and
services:
- New SUNY Award Letter – As the first to adopt the federal Financial
Aid Shopping Sheet, SUNY has developed a standard format for presenting
financial aid offerings at a campus while also displaying campus-specific
graduation rates, default rates, and the median student loan debt of the
campus’ students. The new SUNY award letter will incorporate this
information and enable students and their families to easily compare
colleges and make informed decisions on loan borrowing.
- Student Loan Service
Center Expansion – Currently
used exclusively by SUNY’s state-operated campuses, the SUNY Student Loan
Service Center provides Perkins Loan servicing for students and their
families. The Center will be expanded to serve all SUNY campuses and
provide additional services to support Smart Track.
- Early Engagement – SUNY has partnered with the U.S. Department of
Education to develop a data-driven early-warning initiative that will use
SUNY enrollment and federal student loan data to identify the root causes
of loan default, enabling campuses to “flag” students who possess a high
risk. Campus personnel will use the system to “flag” high risk
students and engage them from the moment they take out a loan through
graduation. Additional services for these students will include
information on responsible borrowing and a connection with a web-based
learning center with loan payment estimators and other useful tools for
managing finances.
- SUNY Smart Track Online
Resources – SUNY’s financial aid
resources will be made available at a central online hub that will be a
one-stop resource for borrowers. Financial aid experts will host online
chats via Facebook, Twitter, and other social media to answer questions and
offer advice to students and families they move through the financial aid
process, and additional financial literacy tools and services will be made
available.
- Net Price Calculator – Launched last year by SUNY, the system’s Net
Price Calculator enables prospective students to calculate the net costs
of the attendance at any SUNY school by providing tuition, room and board
costs, and fees for all campuses. The calculator also allows campuses to
customize the tool for greater transparency.
The six pilot campuses
launching SUNY Smart Track this year are UAlbany, SUNY Fredonia, Niagara County
Community College, Purchase College, Schenectady County Community College, and
SUNY Ulster. The pilot campuses represent a cross section of SUNY colleges and
the diverse needs of the various campus communities within SUNY.
These campuses will fine-tune
each of the various components in collaboration with one another and help to
bring the campaign to scale across the system’s 64 campuses by Fall 2013.
Approximately 267,000 SUNY
students borrow through federal direct loans annually. According to recent U.
S. Department of Education statistics, more than 75,000 SUNY students entered
repayment during the most recent cohort year while 6,000 students fell into
default during the same time period. Forty percent of SUNY students,
about the same as the national average, graduate without loan debt.
About the State University
of New York
The State University of New
York is the largest comprehensive university system in the United States,
educating nearly 468,000 students in more than 7,500 degree and certificate
programs on 64 campuses with nearly 3 million alumni around the globe. To
learn more about how SUNY creates opportunity, visit www.suny.edu.