69传媒

College & Workforce Readiness

Many 69传媒 Don鈥檛 Fill Out the FAFSA. Here鈥檚 One Practice That Could Help

By Sarah Schwartz 鈥 February 02, 2023 4 min read
Young man writing college or university application form with laptop with scholarship document on desk next to him.
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Getting students to complete the FAFSA鈥攖he application for federal financial aid for college鈥攊s a perennial struggle for schools. New data suggests one factor that may make a big difference: meeting with a school counselor.

Filling out the FAFSA is the first step in qualifying for a host of federal grants, loans, and work-study arrangements, and most colleges require it for their own financial aid programs. Still, only about half of all graduating seniors complete it.

But the National Center for Education Statistics in a recent analysis that students who met with their high school counselor about financial aid were more likely to have filled out the form than students who didn鈥檛 have those meetings. The difference was especially pronounced for students whose parents had a high school diploma or less, compared to students whose parents had a higher degree.

School counselors are often the main source of help for students when it comes to the nitty-gritty of FAFSA requirements and deadlines, said Geoff Heckman, a counselor at Platte County High School in Platte City, Mo., and the chair of the American School Counselor Association Board of Directors.

They answer students鈥 questions such as: What kind of tax records do I need? Do I still have to enter information for both parents if I only live with one? 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not sure what exactly all of the qualifiers are and how it impacts them,鈥 Heckman said.

The NCES findings are especially relevant as schools continue to rebound from pandemic-related closures.

FAFSA completion took a hit during the first years of the pandemic, according to the nonprofit National College Attainment Network, which tracks student aid.

About 54 percent of the class of 2019 filled out the FAFSA by June of their senior year in high school. . Still, data from the Network show that completion rates started to climb back up again last school year. And students in poverty and students of color made the biggest gains.

Why students don鈥檛 apply, and what states have done to encourage them

NCES, a wing of the U.S. Department of Education, examined data from the High School Longitudinal Study of 2009鈥攁 national study tracking more than 23,000 students in 9th grade in 2009.

Among students who planned to go to college as of their 11th grade year, 87 percent who met with a school counselor about financial aid completed a FAFSA, compared to 59 percent of students who didn鈥檛 have those meetings鈥攁 gap of 28 percentage points. This gap in completion rates was higher鈥35 percentage points鈥攆or students whose parents had a high school diploma or less.

But having these meetings didn鈥檛 just correlate with applying for aid; they also were related to receiving it.

When these students attended college, 67 percent of those who met with a high school counselor received need-based grants, compared to 45 percent of college students who did not meet with a high school counselor.

See also

Conceptual Illustration of young person sitting on top of a financial trend line.
Vanessa Solis/Education Week and Klaus Vedfelt/DigitalVision<br/>

Historically, the students who most need federal aid the most are also the least likely to apply for it. Completion rates for students from low-income families have long lagged behind those of their peers.

There are a host of reasons why students don鈥檛 complete the FAFSA. A 2018 survey from NCES outlined some of them鈥攎any students thought they wouldn鈥檛 need the money to afford college, or that they wouldn鈥檛 qualify. But 23 percent said they didn鈥檛 have enough information to fill out the form, and 15 percent said they didn鈥檛 know it was an option at all. Black and Hispanic students were more likely than white students to say that their families didn鈥檛 have the information they needed.

The U.S. Department of Education, under both former Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump, has sought to address that problem by advertising the FAFSA and making it easier to fill out.

And some states have started their own initiatives. Since the 2017-18 school year, all graduating seniors in Louisiana have been required to fill out the FAFSA or file for aid through the state鈥檚 own program. The first year the policy was in place, completion rates jumped from 65 percent to 81 percent.

Four other states鈥擳exas, Illinois, Alabama, and New Hampshire鈥攈ave . California, Colorado, and Maryland encourage or incentivize districts to ensure that students complete the aid application.

Still, even with these mandates, there鈥檚 the logistical issue of getting every student the support they need to fill out the form. In the 2020-21 school year, only 14 percent of school districts met the ratio of one school counselor to 250 students recommended by the American School Counselor Association, according to an Educaiton Week analysis.

And while state requirements can help raise completion rates, states should take care to design them so that they don鈥檛 present unintended consequences, Heckman said.

Some parents may not feel comfortable sharing financial information that the FAFSA requires, which could potentially create an obstacle to graduation, he said. There are workarounds to the problem, though, he said鈥攕uch as allowing students to opt out (which Louisiana does).

Ultimately, more encouragement to file the FAFSA is a good thing, he said. 鈥淲e want every student to complete it.鈥

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