Student MAP grants lower than expected2/26/2025
One reason: More eligible students enrolled By Logan Bricker February 13, 2025 College students who receive Monetary Awards Program grants are seeing an 8% cut in their spring semester assistance after a higher-than-expected number of eligible students enrolled in classes this school year. The cuts represent a $12 to $336, or 8%, reduction compared to students' previously estimated MAP grants, according to the Illinois Student Assistance Commission, which administers the grant program.
Lynne Baker, an ISAC spokeswoman said officials – utilizing past years' enrollment numbers – were expecting about 140,000 students to split the approximately $711 million pot for the 2024-25 school year. However, more applicants who were promised grants enrolled in classes. That forced ISAC to reallocate money to ensure everyone got most of the estimated amount. "We have to base our estimates on how many students we think are actually going to go to school," said Baker. "Every year there's a good-sized percentage that doesn't go to school. This is happening in the spring before they've even accepted them. If we cut [applications] off in May based on that, then you'd have a whole bunch of students on a waiting list who would more than likely be able to get that money." By Matthew Dembicki December 11, 2024 The long-expected drop in high school graduates — which colleges watch closely as it affects their enrollments — is coming soon, but it will be gradual rather than a “demographic cliff,” and it will impact racial/ethnic groups and regions differently, with some populations and states likely to see increases.
Those are among the findings of a comprehensive report on high school graduates from the Western Interstate Community for Higher Education (WICHE), which has released the data every four years since 1979. The U.S. will reach its peak number of high school graduates next year (3.9 million) and then start to steadily decline, with projections indicating a -13% drop by 2041 (3.4 million graduates), the report says. But postsecondary institutions have some cushion to craft strategies to buffer expected resulting enrollment declines, according to WICHE. Prairie State College Receives $100,000 Gift from Philanthropist and Alumnus Allan DiCastro2/5/2025
The Prairie State College (PSC) Foundation is honored to announce it received a $100,000 scholarship donation from philanthropist and PSC alumnus Allan DiCastro.
Originally from Chicago Heights, DiCastro attended PSC and later moved to Los Angeles in the 1980s. Despite the distance, he sought ways to give back to the community in memory of his late sister, Gail Ann DiCastro, who passed away in 1979. Ms. DiCastro planned to enroll at PSC in the fall of 1979, but was one of three graduates from Homewood-Flossmoor High School killed in the crash of American Airlines Flight 191, leaving Chicago O’Hare International Airport and heading to Los Angeles on May 25, 1979. The crash claimed 273 lives, including all 258 passengers and 13 crew members, as well as two individuals, on the ground, making it the deadliest aviation accident in U.S. history. Post-secondary trends show a decrease in freshman enrollment. While this is alarming, community colleges are showing resiliency in the fce of these declines. By Génesis Santiago, Senior Government Relations Associate at ACCT. December 2, 2024 On October 23, 2024, the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center reported in its Regular Updates on Higher Education Enrollment an overall increase in enrollment from Fall 2023 to Fall 2024. What is significant is that this overall increase across all higher education sectors is a result of existing students’ persistence and improved retention, not new freshmen. In other words, since Fall 2023, there has been a decline in freshmen enrollment, particularly in the 18- to 20-year-old age group. The good news for community colleges is that, unlike its other counterparts in the higher education space, public 2-year and Primarily Associate–Degree Granting Baccalaureate (PAB) institutions with a high percentage of Pell Grant recipients did see an increase in freshmen enrollment. This increase is especially seen among freshmen enrolling as part-time students in public 2-year and PAB institutions.
While enrollment shows an overall increase for all institution types from last year to this year, we must bear in mind that for the last decade college enrollment has seen a steady decline. Higher education leaders hope that 2024 marks a reverse in that trend, as the National Center for Education Statistics is projecting a gradual increase in enrollment into 2031. |
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