iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Education
 

Chased Away From Student Loans — Some More Digging

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Stuart Nachbar

On April 17, I checked my inbox and found a message from a reader who had read the previous day's column on the JP Morgan/Chase decision to discontinue lending to schools with historically low repayment rates.

I had pointed out that Chase's spokesperson refused to list the affected schools, but that borrowers deserved to know. I also added that such information would end up becoming public anyway, as unhappy borrowers would eventually post it on the Internet. Finally, I stated that the government should provide borrowers, educators and lenders with a list of schools that have below average default rates.

This morning, the reader told me that the U.S Department of Education (DOE) already publishes such a list and it is available to the public. So, I went to their site to take a look. One thing I learned was that you needed to know their terminology in order to find the list. It took some digging to find.

I appreciate the reader pointing this out, because I learned more than I expected. The DOE tracks cohort default rates. A cohort default rate, according to a PDF guide posted on the site, is based on a fraction: the number of borrowers who have defaulted on students over the past two fiscal years divided by the number of borrowers who begin to repay their loans over the past fiscal year. A cohort year is the same as a federal fiscal year, October 1 through September 30.

According to the DOE, A school is subject to sanctions, meaning the loss of Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL), Federal Direct Loan (DL), and/or Federal Pell Grant Program eligibility if the school has three consecutive official cohort default rates that are 25 percent or greater. Also, a school is subject to the loss of FFEL and DL Program eligibility if the school has an official cohort default rate that is greater than 40 percent for the most recent cohort year. The Web site also reported that no school had fallen under these sanctions since FY 2005.

And there is some good news: the national cohort default rate has dropped from a high of 22.4% in 1990 to 4.6 percent in 2005, the last year that the DOE has available data. Cohort default rates ranged from 4.5 percent to 5.4 percent between 2001 and 2005. That means that someone has done a better job of collecting the money from borrowers.

While I can't draw firm conclusions from limited research, I have to believe that private lenders use their own methodology to decide who qualifies for a student loan, as well as the DOE statistics. A 4.6 percent default rate, along with government guarantees and subsidies suggests that student loans are not a risky business, though it is possible collection expenses and subsidized origination fees — charged to students in direct lending - cut into their profits. Even then, some lenders chose to make gifts to financial aid officers to direct students their way. I'd have to guess that the profitability of student loans for the gift-giving lenders depended on receiving preferential treatment.

But my digging takes me back to my original question: how does Chase, or any other lender, choose the "haves" and "have nots?"

According to the DOE Web site, for example, Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Tribally Controlled Community Colleges (TCCs), and Navajo Community Colleges, as defined by statute, have been eligible for relief from the consequences of cohort default rates. As of September 2007, all 98 eligible HBCUs had official FY 2005 cohort default rates that fell below regulatory thresholds. No HBCUs are subject to cohort default rate sanctions.

While the federal government has provided relief, I must ask another question: How have the banks treated borrowers from these schools and others? I welcome any reader to answer.

(Originally published at Educated Quest blog and reprinted with permission of the author, Stuart Nachbar).

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

Stuart Nachbar has been involved with education politics, policy and technology as a student, urban planner, government affairs manager, software executive, and now as author of The Sex Ed Chronicles. Visit his blog, Educated Quest.

Article Tags: borrowers [See Dictionary], cohort [See Dictionary], rate [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on May 02, 2008 at Isnare.com
 
Rate [Ratings: 0 / 5] [Votes: 1]

Unintended Consequences of True School Choice
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

I always try to make it a point to see both sides of an education issue, and as Project Runway host Tim Gunn always tells his fashion designer cast, try to make it work...

Citizens Owe Our Soldiers a New G.I. Bill
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

I have a novel in editing, a story of a college administration in the aftermath of the murder of a U...

A Bill to Protect Military Recruiters
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

I am completing Defending College Heights, a novel about an Irish Catholic family and a college administration in the aftermath of the murder of a U...

Do Graduation Reporting Standards Mean Anything?
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings introduced new proposed regulations to help clarify how schools, districts and states implement policies and business practices under No Child Left Behind...

Comics For Extra Credit - Part 2
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

My first post about comics as an educational aid generated an interesting response — from the managing director of Classical Comics, a comic book company in the United Kingdom...

Endowment Tax is Unsound Public Policy
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

I just read in the May 19 Christian Science Monitor that a Massachusetts legislator proposes a 25 percent tax on college endowments over $1 billion...

Should The High School Military Test Be A Mandatory Test?
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

High school students interested in serving in our armed forces must take an entrance examination called the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB)...

More Guidance Counselors Would Help More Children Get Ahead
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

Before becoming a writer, I spent ten years marketing Web-based job posting and resume tools to college career centers...

Merit Scholarships Should Be Earned Not Handed Out
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

I've read about the decisions of flagship state universities to increase merit-based, not need-based scholarships to the best-of-best students, the ones who might have chosen an Ivy League school, or other highly selective private college...

Caleb's Choice
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

During the last weekend in April, West Point cadet Caleb Campbell was drafted to serve in a different Army...

The Basics Of The Student Loan Mess
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

These past weeks there has been talk in the higher education press about private lenders and state guarantee agencies either withdrawing from the government-subsidized student loan market or refusing to underwrite new loans...

A Student Government Election Made For TV - The Sequel
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

This day, May 6, 2008, I spot a front page headline in my local New Jersey paper, The Trenton Times that reads: Ewing H...

A New Jersey Student Government Election Made For The Screen
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

This day, April 29, 2008, I spot a front page headline in my local New Jersey paper, The Trenton Times that reads: Students kept off ballot: District to explore race factor while rescheduling vote...

Chased Away From Student Loans
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

On April 16, JP Morgan/Chase Manhattan, the bank that recently worked with the Fed to acquire the former Bear Stearns investment bank, announced that they will not be making student loans to entering or continuing students enrolled at schools that have a poor repayment rate...

The Cristo Rey Model Is More Than A Dream
Submitted by: Stuart Nachbar

Shortly after I heard about President Bush's proposal for Pell Grants for low-income children to attend parochial schools, I finished reading More than a Dream: The Christo Rey Story, a inspirational book about the founding of the first Christo Rey Jesuit high school in Chicago's Pilsen/Little Village neighborhood...

7 Books on Blood Diamonds
Submitted by: Lawrence Reaves

In 2006, Leonardo DiCaprio hit the movie screens with Blood Diamonds detailing the story of a diamond smuggler cum mercenary and that of a man who had lost his family to rebels who kidnapped his son for work in a conflict diamond mine...

College Admissions Consulting Makes All the Difference
Submitted by: Jason Kay

Getting accepted into the college of your choice is a tricky thing to do at times but by using a college admissions consultant you can greatly increase your chances of getting accepted into the first college on your list...

The Importance of Campus Life For College Students
Submitted by: A.Noton

College is a time for leaving the comfort and security of home and embarking on the journey to adulthood...

Way on How to Build Your Child’s Self-confidence
Submitted by: Seomul Evans

Self confidence is the elemental power It puts up courage to see off hard times and the strength to achieve success...

Winning Approach to GRE Test Prep - Boost Your GRE Test Score
Submitted by: Frank Dee

Did you know that the GRE exam is designed to test your general ability rather than your knowledge of a specific area...

How to Maximize on GRE Practice Tests
Submitted by: Francis Nderi

Most people do not have this very important secret: the GRE exam is designed very much like a standard IQ test and is set to test your general intelligence and ability...

Top Reasons You Should Learn Foreign Language?
Submitted by: Seomul Evans

Would you like to study it abroad Do you want to learn a new foreign language...

Ways Language Courses Can Help You Become a Better Traveler?
Submitted by: Seomul Evans

One of the most difficult situations for the language teacher is a group which includes students of different levels, of varying learning ability, or even both...

Top Advantages of Using Professional Translation Service Providers?
Submitted by: Seomul Evans

With the globalization of the corporate structure, professional translation services are an invaluable asset...

How to Say Thank You in Different Foreign Languages?
Submitted by: Seomul Evans

The 1st thing to recollect is that if you're moving to a foreign country you should be sure that you know the basic principles advance or you may begin making oppositions as soon as you step ot the plane...

Top Benefits of Learning a Foreign Language
Submitted by: Seomul Evans

Learning a foreign language here in the United States should be mandatory When I toured France and Germany a couple of years back, it was amazing to see everyone from the flight attendant, the cashier at Burger King, the sales clerk at the flea market, the street cleaner, and even the Chinese in Chinatown in the southern part of Paris speak in at least two, if not three languages...

Discover How to Teach Business English
Submitted by: Adrianna Noton

People decide to learn English for many different reasons It could be a hobby, a desire to study in an English speaking country, to understand songs and books in English or to open up business opportunities and be selected for promotion in your company...

State 529 College Funding Savings Plan - Is it the Only Program to Secure Your Child's Education?
Submitted by: Amaan Goyal

As Parents you would like to secure your child’s future and his prospects The best insurance you can provide to your children is education but with the alarming rate with which tuition expenses have gone through the roof, it raises doubts and questions for parents...

Diamonds as Conversation Pieces
Submitted by: Jill Renee

Diamonds are the iconic symbol of engagement and betrothal but it is has not always been so Throughout history, different cultures have placed different value and interpretation on the beauty and brilliance of one of the rarest, but most sought after precious stones...

Making the Right Choice For Online Tutoring - Tutoring Companies V/s Freelance Tutors.
Submitted by: Venky Sharma

With the explosion in use of internet for learning, online tutoring has become a favorite for students all over the globe...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy