Report: 15 Ways To Improve Consumer Information For College Students and Schools

WASHINGTON, DC — Current consumer information requirements for higher education institutions can be streamlined, enhanced or eliminated to better educate students and to remove unnecessary regulatory burden on institutional officials, according to a new policy report from the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA).

A geographically and institutionally diverse task force of NASFAA members evaluated existing consumer information requirements and compiled 15 recommendations to better serve and understand higher education students, while freeing up financial aid administrators to focus on vital disclosures and counseling.

The recommendations, approved by NASFAA’s Board of Directors in June 2014, span the lifecycle of a student’s college experience, and include:

  • Enhancing the U.S. Department of Education’s (ED) College Navigator to make it the primary tool for disseminating college information;
  • making ED and loan servicers responsible for developing and distributing loan-related consumer information, including debt management; and
  • repealing the ban on a federal-level student unit record, to develop a limited student unit record that collects more accurate and comprehensive data on contemporary student behavior.

“The number of disclosures students receive from their institutions is overwhelming,” says NASFAA’s President and CEO Justin Draeger. “Today’s disclosures aren’t just unhelpful, they may actually hinder students from deciphering what is truly important when making college-going and financial aid decisions. Implementing the task force’s recommendations at the federal level would greatly improve information for students.”

“Students need the most vital information delivered to them in a consumer-tested disclosure,” says task force Chair Bonnie Joerschke, director of the Office of Student Financial Aid at the University of Georgia. “Next, they need one centralized place where they can find any other information related to that institution.”

NASFAA’s recommendations build on other consumer information work NASFAA has done, including consumer testing on the best ways to convey and deliver financial aid awards.

The full list of 15 recommendations can be found in the policy report.

About NASFAA
The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) is a nonprofit membership organization that represents nearly 20,000 financial aid professionals at approximately 3,000 colleges, universities and career schools across the country. NASFAA member institutions serve nine out of every ten undergraduates in the U.S. Based in Washington, DC, NASFAA is the only national association with a primary focus on student aid legislation, regulatory analysis and training for financial aid administrators. For more information, visit nasfaa.org.

Featured

  • Image credit: O

    Strategic Campus Assessment: Moving Beyond Reactive Maintenance in Educational Facilities

    While campuses may appear stable on the surface, building systems naturally evolve over time, and proactive assessment can identify developing issues before they become expensive emergencies. The question isn't whether aging educational facilities need attention. It's how institutions can transition from costly reactive maintenance to strategic asset management in a way that protects both budgets and communities.

  • University of Southern Mississippi Starts Construction on Oyster Hatchery

    The University of Southern Mississippi (USM) recently announced that construction has begun on a new oyster hatchery at its Gulf Coast Research Laboratory (GCRL) Thad Cochran Marine Aquaculture Center (TCMAC) Cedar Point campus in Ocean Springs, Miss., according to a news release.

  • Upcoming University of Alabama Performing Arts Center Hits Construction Milestone

    The University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Ala., recently celebrated the topping out of its new Smith Family Center for Performing Arts, according to a news release. The university is partnering with HPM for program and project management on the facility, which broke ground in 2023 and is scheduled for completion in November 2026.

  • South Texas K–12 District Debuts Region’s First Electric Bus Fleet

    The Valley View Independent School District in Pharr, Texas, recently announced a partnership with Highland Electric Fleets to launch the district’s—and the region’s—first fleet of all-electric school buses, according to a news release.

Digital Edition