[4469] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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Re: [Mit-talk] MIT to be tuition-free for families earning less

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Alicia Hunt)
Fri Mar 7 22:20:14 2008

In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.64L.0803072202290.14816@how-about-a-nice-game-of-chess.mit.edu
	>
Date: Fri, 7 Mar 2008 22:19:18 -0500
To: Erica H Peterson <astronut@mit.edu>, John Hawkinson <jhawk@mit.edu>
From: Alicia Hunt <iggy@mit.edu>
Cc: mit-talk@mit.edu
Errors-To: mit-talk-bounces@mit.edu

I think there are problems with MIT's mail system today,  we've had a 
lot of trouble with email delayed many hours between send and receive 
times today and in fact, the following is on 3down:

Friday, March 7, 1:58pm
Mailman service (mailman.mit.edu) has been restored.

I suspect mail may be still coming through (I didn't get the email 
from Beth yet for example)

-Alicia

At 10:03 PM -0500 3/7/08, Erica H Peterson wrote:
>Well I can't speak for current students, but I got alumni mail from "Beth
>Garvin HM" (alumvp@alum.mit.edu) with this information this afternoon.
>
>Cheers,
>Erica
>
>On Fri, 7 Mar 2008, John Hawkinson wrote:
>
>>  Why is there no email in my mailbox?
>>
>>  http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2008/tuition-0307.html
>>
>>  Attached here in full.
>>
>>  --jhawk
>>
>>            MIT to be tuition-free for families earning
>>            less than $75,000 a year
>>
>>            Nearly 30 percent of MIT students to have all
>>            tuition charges covered
>>
>>            March 7, 2008
>>
>>            The Massachusetts Institute of Technology
>>            (MIT) today announced its financial aid
>>            program for 2008-2009. Increases in financial
>>            aid will make it possible for a larger
>>            fraction of MIT students to have their
>>            tuition and fees completely covered.
>>
>>            Under the new plan, which will take effect in
>>            the 2008-2009 academic year:
>>
>>              * Families earning less than $75,000 a year
>>                will have all tuition covered. For
>>                parents with total annual income below
>>                $75,000 and typical assets, MIT will
>>                ensure that all tuition charges are
>>                covered with an MIT scholarship, federal
>>                and state grants, and/or outside
>>                scholarship funds. Nearly 30 percent of
>>                MIT students fall into this tuition-free
>>                category.
>>              * For families earning less than $75,000 a
>>                year, MIT will eliminate the student loan
>>                expectation. MIT will no longer expect
>>                students from families with total annual
>>                income below $75,000 and typical assets
>>                to take out loans to cover expenses
>>                beyond tuition. Under this provision, for
>>                example, students in this income group
>>                who participate in MIT's paid
>>                Undergraduate Research Opportunities
>>                Program (UROP) each semester would be
>>                able to graduate debt-free.
>>              * For families earning less than $100,000,
>>                MIT will eliminate home equity in
>>                determining their need. In determining
>>                the ability to pay for college, MIT will
>>                no longer consider home equity for
>>                families with total annual income below
>>                $100,000 and typical assets. On average,
>>                this will reduce parental contributions
>>                by $1,600. For families who rent, rather
>>                than own a home, MIT will provide a
>>                comparable reduction in the expected
>>                parental contribution.                    TOOLS
>>              * MIT will reduce student work-study
>>                requirements for all financial aid        printer 
>>Print version
>>                recipients. During the past decade, MIT
>>                has steadily lowered the amount it        e-mail 
>>E-mail article:
>>                expects students to provide through       Use the 
>>form below to
>>  news           term-time work. MIT will take a further   e-mail a 
>>link to this
>>                step in this direction by reducing the    article.
>>  recent         work-study expectation for all financial
>>  research       aid recipients by an additional 10        To [e-mail addresse
>  > campus by      percent.                                  (s)]:
>>  topic                                                    [ 
>>]
>>  events     The Institute has a long tradition of opening
>>  archives   its doors to talented students from a full    From (your name):
>>  in the     range of economic backgrounds. For more than  [ 
>>]
>>  news       four decades, MIT has made its undergraduate
>>            financial aid decisions by following a        (your 
>>e-mail address):
>>  subscribe  three-part financial aid philosophy. "First,  [ 
>>]
>>            we are need-blind in admissions, meaning that
>>  podcasts   we admit all undergraduates on the basis of   Personal message to
>>  e-news     academic merit alone, without considering     recipient
>>  tech talk  their ability to pay," said Dean for          (optional)
>>  news       Undergraduate Education Daniel Hastings.      [ 
>>]
>>  releases   "Second, MIT meets the full demonstrated      [ 
>>]
>>  rss feeds  financial need of all students we admit.      [ 
>>]
>>            Third, we award all our aid based on need     [                  ]
>>  services   alone; MIT does not award any academic,
>>            athletic or other forms of merit              The MIT News Office
>>  request    scholarships."                                does not store this
>>  images                                                   information.
>>  submit     Total financial aid budget is one of the
>>  news       highest per enrolled student in the nation.   To send, 
>>click "E-mail
>>  promote    Building on this commitment, MIT will         article" below.
>>  news media increase its financial aid budget to $74
>>  inquiries  million. MIT's total financial aid budget is  [email-artic]
>>            one of the highest per enrolled student in
>>  about us   the nation. Sixty percent of MIT              add RSS RSS feeds
>>            undergraduates receive scholarship aid from
>>  news       the Institute's internal resources. Fully 90
>>  office     percent of MIT undergraduates receive         RELATED
>>  info MIT   financial aid of some kind, from a range of
>>  background sources. While MIT focuses assistance on      Letter to the
>>  contact    those with fewer resources, it also provides  Community 
>>on Financial
>>  MIT home   aid to families with incomes well above       Aid and 
>>the Endowment
>>            $100,000 who demonstrate need--for example,   - February 29, 2008
>>            because they have more than one child in
>>            college at a time. In fact, approximately 38  More: Administration
>>            percent of our current MIT scholarship
>>            recipients come from families earning more    More: Students
>>            than $100,000.
>>
>>            Tuition and fees for the upcoming academic
>>            year will increase 4 percent to $36,390;
>>            however, this figure represents less than
>>            half of what it costs MIT to educate an
>>            undergraduate. As Hastings noted, "In a
>>            pattern MIT has followed for many years, we
>>            are increasing funds available for financial
>>            aid this year at a far greater rate than the
>>            rise in tuition." During the past decade, the
>>            net tuition for undergraduates--what students
>>            and families pay after financial aid--has, on
>>            average, dropped by more than 15 percent when
>>            adjusted for inflation.
>>
>>            "For those receiving an MIT scholarship,
>>            which is six out of every 10 MIT
>>            undergraduates, net tuition is $8,100--an
>>            amount that approximates the in-state cost of
>>            many public universities," Hastings added.
>>
>>            Tradition of ensuring access and
>>            affordability for those who need it most.
>>            MIT has long taken an aggressive position on
>>            aid because its students demonstrate a much
>>            higher level of need than students at peer
>>            institutions. More than 22 percent of MIT
>>            undergraduates come from families with annual
>  >           incomes less than $60,000 a year; 17 percent
>>            come from families with incomes under
>>            $45,000.
>>
>>            Two years ago, the Institute took a
>>            leadership role in the national debate on
>>            financial aid when it became the first
>>            private university to match Federal Pell
>>            Grants, dollar for dollar, effectively
>>            doubling this federal grant for the neediest
>>            students. Approximately 14 percent of MIT
>>            undergraduates receive a Pell Grant, the
>>            largest federal grant program for
>>            undergraduate education.
>>
>>           "We will continue our longstanding financial
>>            commitment to students and their families in
>>            the years ahead," Hastings stated. "That we
>>            can welcome to our campus such extraordinary
>>            students, regardless of their economic
>>            background, is due to our historic dedication
>>            to need-based financial aid."
>>
>>                   news office     77 massachusetts avenue 
>>617-253-2700         rss feed icon rss
>>  MIT home          room 11-400     cambridge, ma 02139-4307 
>>newsoffice@mit.edu   feeds
>> 
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>>
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Alicia L Hunt 
iggy@mit.edu                              
Assistant Director for Graduate Housing      (617) 253-0191
Division of Student Life, MIT                            E19-429C
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