Create a free Diverse: Issues In Higher Education account to continue reading

Yale Announces Boost in Financial Aid

NEW HAVEN, Conn.  — Yale University said Monday it is joining an expanding group of elite colleges under pressure from parents, lawmakers and alumni to make top schools more affordable to middle-class and upper-middle-class families.

The Ivy League school announced what it called the largest increase in financial aid spending in its history, boosting contributions from its endowment by more than $24 million to more than $80 million annually.

The move will reduce the average cost by more than half for families with financial need, Yale officials said.

About 43 percent of Yale’s 5,300 undergraduates qualify for financial aid, said spokesman Tom Conroy. Yale’s tuition is about $45,000 a year.

“Yale should be a college of choice for the very best and brightest students from across America and around the world, regardless of financial circumstances,” Yale President Richard Levin said in a statement. “We want all of our students to make the most of Yale — academically and beyond — without worrying about excessive work hours or debt. Our new financial aid package makes this aspiration a reality.”

The changes go into effect in the fall.

In making the announcement, Yale joins a group of elite schools — including rival Harvard — in boosting financial aid.

Harvard announced last month that it will provide $20 million more in financial aid. Harvard’s tuition, room and board are $45,600 a year.

Duke earlier announced a plan to spend an extra $13 million on aid by capping loans and eliminating any required parental contribution from families earning less than $60,000.

The University of Pennsylvania, Pomona, Swarthmore and Haverford all announced they would eliminate loans, more than doubling the small number of schools promising all students a debt-free graduation.

Yale, which has the second biggest endowment in the nation, also announced that it would keep the increase in its tuition, room and board charges in 2008-2009 to the expected level of the consumer price inflation of 2.2 percent.

Yale said it is increasing the number of families that qualify for aid, eliminating the need for students to take loans, enhancing its grants to families with more than one child attending college, exempting the first $200,000 of family assets from the assessment of need, and increasing expense allowances for foreign students.

Families with incomes less than $120,000 will see their contributions cut by more than 50 percent, while most families with incomes between $120,000 and $200,000 will see cost reductions of 33 percent or more, Yale officials said.

Families earning less than $60,000 will not make any contribution, while those earning between $60,000 and $120,000 will typically contribute 1 to 10 percent of family income, and families earning more than $120,000 will contribute an average of 10 percent of income.

For example, Yale said, a family with an income of $90,000 would contribute $2,950 per year under the new policy, down from $12,550 under the old policy. A family making $180,000 would contribute about $23,000, down from $38,000.

Student contributions would also decline from $4,400 under the old policy to $2,500 under the new policy.

Yale officials announced last week that the school will spend more money from its $22.5 billion endowment in the 2008-2009 academic year on financial aid and scientific research. The university intends to increase the annual endowment payout for such programs by 37 percent to $1.15 billion, Levin said.

Yale’s endowment is topped only by Harvard’s, which stands at about $34.9 billion.

–Associated Press

There are currently 0 comments on this story.
Click here to post a comment



© Copyright 2005 by DiverseEducation.com

The trusted source for all job seekers
We have an extensive variety of listings for both academic and non-academic positions at postsecondary institutions.
Read More
The trusted source for all job seekers