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Image: One-stop services are not new to higher education. For decades, colleges have consolidated many of their admissions and enrollment services functions under a single umbrella office—including, but not limited to, the bursar, the registrar, the cashier’s office and financialaid. Why a One-Stop?
So there’s different financialaid implications around what it will cover and what it won’t. But over on Title IV funding streams for Pell and other forms of student financialaid, I think there’s a growing recognition across the board Matthew Sterenberg (10:25.919) So. Maybe I want to move up.
Or even if you think about veterans with all of the skills that they’ve mastered in their military occupation, specialization, sometimes are difficult to translate into a civilian competency or description. So we’ve got to have more virtual service delivery. And are you college, career or military?
Paying the Price: College Costs, FinancialAid, and the Betrayal of the American Dream. The Price of Admission: How America's Ruling Class Buys its Way into Elite Colleges and Who Gets Left Outside the Gates. Goldrick-Rab, S. Graeber, David (2018) B t Jobs: A Theory. Simon and Schuster. Groeger, Cristina Viviana (2021).
In fiscal year 2024, the Education Department spent about $161 billion -- 60% of its $268 billion budget -- to fund its office of Federal Student Aid , the countrys largest provider of student financialaid. Department of Health and Human Services. Department of Veterans Affairs. Department of Education.
It oversees key federal programs, such as Title I, which provides financial assistance to schools with high numbers of low-income students, and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), which supports students with special needs. It suggests a shift away from public service toward a model that values spectacle over substance.
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