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FAFSA ‘train wreck’ rollout snares students in uncertainty. What went wrong?

A revamp of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, that was supposed to make securing government financial aid for college easier, has done just the opposite. Delays, glitches and new rules have left many students wondering where, and even if, they can enroll in college this fall. The setback may have serious consequences for those who need financial aid the most.

“This FAFSA rollout has been a train wreck,” says Robert Kelchen, head of the Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Why We Wrote This

The new FAFSA application will eventually be easier. But the current process for federal student aid has stymied applicants, especially those from non-traditional homes.

FAFSA funding expands access to post-secondary education and provides work-study programs for students and government loans among other things. As the FAFSA program has grown, the students using it have become more diverse in terms of race, family income, and first-generation status.

“There are fewer people with the ability to pay for college out of pocket,” says Professor Kelchen. Partly as a result of the recent glitch, fewer students are seeking aid, and fewer still are likely to head back to school in the fall, say experts. Just over 38% of high school seniors had filled out a FAFSA application by May 1, compared to 60% last year.

Millions of prospective college students are scrambling to determine which school to attend in the fall, or whether to go at all. The hang-up? Federal student funding packages, supposed to arrive weeks – if not months – earlier, are still trickling in. 

A revamp of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, that was supposed to make the lengthy process easier, has done just the opposite. Repeated delays plus technical glitches and new requirements have combined for a frustrating process that experts say has undermined public confidence in access to higher education. It will have serious consequences, they say, for the students who need it most. 

“This FAFSA rollout has been a train wreck,” says Robert Kelchen, head of the Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. 

Why We Wrote This

The new FAFSA application will eventually be easier. But the current process for federal student aid has stymied applicants, especially those from non-traditional homes.

FAFSA funding impacts the entire ecosystem of higher education. “This affects students. This affects colleges. It affects the states because they’re having to delay their financial aid to students as well,’’ Professor Kelchen says. “And it definitely does not help the public trust in higher education.”

What is FAFSA funding and who uses it? 

The FAFSA program expands access to post-secondary education through a collection of financial tools. Funding is based on need, and includes the Pell Grant, which now provides up to $7,395 per school year to low-income students. Federal aid also provides work-study programs for students and government-subsidized loans, which have flexible repayment programs based on the student’s income – and don’t begin until a student is out of school. Federal loans also qualify for federal forgiveness programs, like ones for certain teachers, healthcare professionals, or government employees. 

As the FAFSA program has grown since the inception of federal student financial aid in 1965, so, too, has the type of students who use it: They’re more diverse in terms of race, family income, and first-generation status, explains Professor Kelchen. “And it’s not necessarily the FAFSA that’s causing that, but it’s just a more diverse group of young and middle aged people. And there are fewer people with the ability to pay for college out of pocket,” he says.

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