The student should file the FAFSA, the GPA Verification
form, and (if needed) an IAA, as early as possible.
Some aid, such as FSEOG, Perkins, and Institutional
Aid, may be awarded on a first come, first serve
basis.
If your tax forms will not be completed in January,
apply using estimated information, rather than
waiting for the tax forms.
Receive Aid Offer (April-May)
The schools that receive your aid application
will send you an offer of aid.
Some schools will wait until you have applied
for admission and/or until you have been accepted
or until you have submitted additional paperwork
before processing your application.
The initial offer is only as accurate as the
information provided by the student on the FAFSA
and other forms.
The school’s aid offer could change as the school
receives more accurate information.
Submit Paperwork (April-May)
Each school will let you know what paperwork
is needed to process your aid.
This may include:
The parents’ 1999 tax form and W2s
The student’s 1999 tax form and W2s
A Stafford loan application
Financial aid transcripts from any prior
colleges attended by the student.
The sooner you submit the needed items to the
school, the sooner the school will be able to
confirm and process your aid.
Coordination and Verification (Summer)
Once the school has received all of your paperwork,
they will compare the new information (from your
tax forms, Student Aid Report, etc.) to your original
application, update the information and adjust
your aid offer. This process is the verification
process.
As the school learns about other aid you will
receive — Cal Grant, institutional scholarships,
private scholarships, etc. — they may need to
adjust your aid offer to prevent you from receiving
more aid than you are eligible to receive. The
process is called coordination
Coordination and verification may cause significant
changes in your award offer. Therefore, it is
important that the school received your correct
information as soon as possible. If there are
any changes, they will notify you as early as
possible.
If the student will be receiving a loan, the
school will require the student to attend some
kind of loan counseling session. This may be a
large group seminar, a small group presentation,
a one-on-one interview, or in the form of a written
questionnaire.
The loan counseling will take place after school
begins.
The student may also need to sign for the loans.
Federal Stafford Loan checks (for those not receiving
funds by EFT), and Perkins Loan promissory notes
will need to be signed by the student.
PLUS loan checks are usually mailed to the parent
to endorse.
Renew Aid (January-February, 2001)
All need-based financial aid, federal, state,
and institutional aid is awarded on a yearly basis
Each year, the student needs to reapply for
the following year.