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Reply to "In-state students from families earning less than $80K will be able to attend U.Va. tuition-free"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]UVA is already 10% low income and launched the Blue Ridge Scholars and participates in Questbridge, so I don't think this is new, but Ryan needed something to say in his inaugural address. https://giving.virginia.edu/scholarships/blue-ridge-scholars/[/quote] Only 10% low income??for a public school?? Give me a damn break. [/quote] UVA has nothing to say about what percentage is determined to be low-income. The federal government establishes what low-income is and what a student is entitled to receive after the family files the FAFSA. The term "low-income individual" has been established by the Department of Education to be an individual whose family's taxable income for the preceding year did not exceed 150 percent of the poverty level amount. Here are the ranges. https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ope/trio/incomelevels.html. The federal government sets a EFC (Expected Family Contribution) for each student. That info goes from the Department of ED to UVA. UVA pays 100 percent of education costs for low-income students as defined by the U.S. Department of Education. [b]In addition to 10% low income, UUVA also has 35% students of color, 10% first-generation students (often from low-income or middle-income backgrounds), 8% international students,[/b] 37% OOS, etc. Also, the University has 100 Blue Ridge Scholarships for high achieving students from disadvantaged or underrepresented backgrounds. And there are also the Jefferson Scholars (full ride) as well that often goes to low-income students, but not necessarily. And UVA participates in Questbridge as well (HHI of less than 65K a year). To further diversity it brings in students from all 50 states and 147 nations. Finally, UVA expanded its financial aid program for middle-income Virginians in 2017, these are called "Cornerstone Grants" of $15 million to be distributed over the next three years. Middle-income families are defined as families with income of less than $125K who do not receive grants or scholarships from other sources. Please remember that the Cost of Attendance at UVA is also set at a fraction of what private universities and SLACs are charging. For many families, that delta of $45K or more per year means the difference between attending college or not attending even if they are paying full-freight.[/quote] [b]I think the point was these are low numbers compared to schools like UCLA and Berkeley.[/quote][/b] As pointed out above, one can't compare the differing state universities. They all operate differently and have different rules and different financial arrangements with the state legislatures. UVA operates almost entirely separate from the legislature. Cal and UCLA and Texas do not.[/quote]
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