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International Membership

Connect to the world of higher education

With AACRAO membership you'll be connected to more than 11,000 members from institutions around the world. Facilitate your professional development by attending discounted meetings, gaining complimentary subscriptions to our College & University journal and more.

Why should you join? From professional development opportunities to forging connections that will help you in setting down career stones, there's more than one reason. 

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Annual Membership Price: Starting at $302

Requirements: YOU MUST BE AT A POSTSECONDARY DEGREE-GRANTING INSTITUTION OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES RECOGNIZED BY THE MINISTRY OF EDUCATION OR APPROPRIATE MINISTRY IN YOUR COUNTRY AND AUTHORIZED TO GRANT DEGREES.

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When education standards change, new credentials are awarded, or foreign education systems are reorganized, AACRAO EDGE utilizes the expertise of the International Education Standards Council (IESC) to review and update our database.

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Work on your skills like diversity and inclusion, interpretation and application of institutional and external data, and leadership. We have the tools for you.

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From free webinars to self-paced on-demand learning, AACRAO's online learning covers a variety of subjects—technology, strategic enrollment management, admissions, FERPA, transfer, credential evaluation, and international education—and allow you to engage with the presenters and instructors.

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AACRAO's Career Navigator is a wealth of job postings and resources for training. 

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AACRAO's professional journals College & University and SEM Quarterly are always accepting articles and have a wide circulation base.

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Leverage the expertise of our over 11,000 members and contribute to one of the premier sources of practice related research within the global higher education community. 

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Do work you're passionate about, with support and mentoring from fellow members. From Caucuses to specialized topics, it's all one community, no matter where in the world your institution is located. 


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AACRAO's bi-weekly professional development e-newsletter

Annual Meeting Insights: Financial Aid Issues

Aug 23, 2013, 23:18 PM
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Financial Aid for Registrars and Admissions Officers

In a time when increasing numbers of students are turning toward financial aid to cover the cost of rising college tuition, understanding aid is more critical than ever.
Jennifer Hoege and Bill Dougherty, Director and Manager respectively for Madison Area Technical College, implored a large audience comprised of registrars and admissions officers to better understand the more technical aspects of aid in order to better serve their students.

The presenters began by familiarizing the audience with different types of financial aid and frequently-used acronyms: Satisfactory Academic Progress (SAP), the Student Award Report (SAR), the award year policy, PELL, PERKINS, and many others. As the presentation progressed, it became apparent that nearly every student happening influences financial aid, and needs to be recorded and shared.
 
The session highlighted the need for registrars to record and share, among other things, student grades (and when they are due); the date of final attendance or the graduation date; and if transfer credits are present in the transcript. Admissions officers need to ensure new or changed programs are eligible for financial aid based on their credit requirements; if a program has been discontinued; and that the final high school transcript has been received.
 
The presentation ended with a look towards the future. As non-traditional classes and study abroad programs become more prevalent in student curricula, admissions and registrar teams will need to work closely with the financial aid department to maintain student satisfaction and accurate reporting disbursement.

Increasing Student Loan Debt: Learning from the Past and Present to Address the Future 

From the Indiana Commission on Higher Education down to local student activists, Indiana University (IU) has experienced pressure as of late to keep tuition flat or at a minimum. IU’s David Johnson, Vice Provost for Enrollment Management, and Roy Durnal, Director of the Student Services Center, helped finish the Annual Meeting in San Francisco with a thought-provoking and substantive study of how one school has responded to this pressure by developing actionable solutions to tackle the rising costs of higher education.
 
Current budgetary constraints make lowering or freezing tuition untenable at most institutions, and so student loans have become unavoidable. Understanding the consequences of taking those loans out, and how to effectively manage them, became a key point in IU policy. Personnel in relevant departments, such as in the Student Service Center, earned certificates in financial management and then created a multi-faceted financial literacy campaign.
 
The session discussed IU’s current and upcoming initiatives, such as their literacy website, student workshops, a required online tutorial, one-credit courses in finance offered by the business school, and peer-to-peer advising. To promote departmental collaboration, the Office of Enrollment Management also leveraged merit- and need-based aid, in addition to a new, carefully managed summer program, where students may take classes with a 25% tuition discount.

Live Like a Student Now: A Financial Aid Literacy Campaign Case Study
 
Julie Selander from the University of Minnesota – Twin Cities opened her session on financial aid literacy at AACRAO’s Annual Meeting with sobering statistics on the modern student. An Inceptia survey noted that 70% of polled students said they have or will use loans to pay for school. A separate study by the Jump$tart Coalition demonstrated that between 1997 and 2008, there was a nearly 10 percent drop in financial aid literacy rates among incoming students. Thus stated, the argument for a campaign to inform these students is compelling.
 
In 2009, the University of Minnesota’s One stop Student Services and Office of Student Finance worked to develop a simple, consistent, and engaging message. The result was “Live Like a Student Now so You Don’t Have to Later,” or simply LLAS. The campaign is focused on building awareness of smart-money decisions in a typical student’s day-to-day life through traditional messaging, social media, and other platforms.
 
The LLAS campaign extends to events at the Freshmen Welcome Week and exit interviews for outgoing seniors. While the exit interviews were a longstanding and beneficial practice, the welcome week events have had lots of success; 70% of students polled after the literacy events agreed or strongly agreed that the information presented helped them think more critically about money.

By: AACRAO Connect

 

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