Nov 23, 2024  
2020-21 Graduate Catalog 
    
2020-21 Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Financial Aid Policies


About Arcadia University Financial Aid

For institutional (Arcadia-funded) scholarships and grants, in most instances, a student must be enrolled in a full-time cohort graduate program, taking a minimum of nine credits a semester. Students must remain in good academic standing according to their respective program’s academic requirements in order to have their Arcadia scholarship renewed each semester. To be eligible for graduate assistantships, students must be enrolled as a full-time graduate student, taking a minimum of nine credits per semester.

Graduate Satisfactory Academic Progress Policy for Title IV (Federal) Aid

Arcadia University is required by federal regulation to monitor student progression toward completion of his/her degree. This Satisfactory Academic Progress Standard includes both a quantitative and qualitative measure of progress. The quantitative measure states that a student must complete a specific percentage of attempted credits in order to maintain satisfactory progress for Title IV (federal) aid purposes. This determination of progress must be made at least once a year and before the Financial Aid Office disburses any Title IV (federal) funds for the subsequent semester or year. The qualitative measure requires the student to maintain a cumulative GPA that meets the minimum standard for Academic Good Standing for Title IV academic progress only. Specific academic programs and/or departments will set their own academic progress guidelines (cumulative GPA and required credits successfully completed) that students must achieve to remain in their respective program(s). Those guidelines are separate from those below. Title IV (federal) funds graduate students may qualify for include: Federal Direct Stafford Loans, GradPLUS Loans and TEACH Grants.

Pursuant to Title IV (federal) regulations, the following constitutes Arcadia’s policy on satisfactory academic progress as it relates to Title IV aid for graduate students.

Maximum Hours to Earn Degree: To quantify academic progress, a school must set a maximum time frame in which a student is expected to complete a program. For a graduate program, the maximum time frame cannot exceed 150% of the published or standard length of the program (assuming consecutive semester enrollment) measured in credit hours attempted.

For example, if a master’s degree program requires completion of 30 credits, the maximum time frame for students in these programs is 45 attempted credits (30 x 1.5=45). Students whose specific academic programs require more than 30 credits for a degree will have a higher limit.

Earned Credits: Credits earned toward degree completion. This includes transfer credits. It does not include courses assigned a W or U, or audited courses. *

Attempted Credits: Includes all transfer, remedial, English as a Second Language (ESL) and Arcadia-registered credits, including Pass/Fail courses and courses from which a student enrolled but subsequently withdrew. Does not include audited (non-credit) courses.

Quantitative Standard

To be eligible for continued receipt of Title IV (federal) financial aid, students must satisfactorily complete at least 50% of all attempted credits as measured on an academic year basis. Withdrawals/Dropped courses, transfer credits, Pass/Fail courses and remedial courses are counted as attempted credits. (Note: Credits from the preceding summer can count toward this percentage, provided they did not count toward progress for the prior academic year).

Example: If a student attempts 12 credits total in an academic year, he/she must minimally successfully complete (no F grades) a minimum of 6 credits for that given academic year.

Qualitative Standard

To be eligible for continued receipt of financial aid, students must achieve a 2.7 cumulative grade point average (GPA). Note that specific program academic standards may be higher or lower.

Measurement of Academic Progress

Academic Progress measurement includes all semesters and is usually measured at the end of the spring semester. Students beginning their program in the spring semester will be evaluated based on their academic performance during their first spring semester and at the end of each subsequent spring semester. Also, the satisfactory progress standards are cumulative and will include all semesters of the student’s enrollment, even those for which the student did not receive financial aid.

Failures and withdrawals do count as “attempted credits”, not “earned credits”. Incompletes are not counted toward credits completed until after the course work is successfully completed and a grade is posted by the Registrar’s Office. Repeat courses will be evaluated for satisfactory academic progress.

When Minimum Standards of Academic Progress Are Not Achieved

Students who fail to meet either the quantitative or qualitative standard will be notified in writing by the Financial Aid Office after information on academic progress becomes available at the end of the academic year (typically late May/early June). Students who fail to meet either the quantitative or qualitative standard will not be eligible for Title IV (federal) financial aid until all requirements have been met. This academic progress determination will supersede any financial aid package for the upcoming year which may have been offered to the student at that point. Under no circumstances will Title IV financial aid be awarded retroactively to the semester(s) in which the requirements were not met.

Students who fail to meet these requirements have the opportunity to make up the hours and grade point requirements needed during the Summer sessions (at their own expense). Once the Summer course work is posted by the Registrar’s Office, the student will be considered for financial aid for the next semester if the requirements are met. It is the student’s responsibility to ensure official transcripts reflecting the grades and credits completed have been properly submitted to the Registrar’s Office. Additionally, it is the student’s responsibility to notify the Financial Aid Office once this has occurred so his/her eligibility can be re-reviewed.

Academic Progress Appeal Process

If a student feels that there were extenuating circumstances which prevented him/her from making satisfactory academic progress (i.e.- the death of a relative, a serious personal illness/injury, or other extenuating circumstance), and can demonstrate that the illness/injury or extenuating circumstance had a direct impact on his/her academic performance, he/she will be notified accordingly and may submit a Financial Aid Academic Progress Appeal Form to the Executive Director of Federal Aid Programs. Information submitted by way of an Academic Progress Appeal will remain confidential. If the Financial Aid Academic Progress Appeals Committee feels that there are mitigating circumstances that had a direct bearing on the student’s academic performance, then the student can receive Title IV (Federal financial aid) during a probationary period for one semester. If a student fails to meet both standards of academic progress for Title IV aid purposes at the end of the probationary period (semester), then the student becomes ineligible for Title IV aid until he/she meets the appropriate progress standard(s).

Please note: The mere passage of time will not automatically restore Title IV aid eligibility to a student who has lost eligibility for failure to make satisfactory progress. Also, students who have been academically dismissed from the university but who are subsequently given permission to re-enroll are not automatically eligible to continue to receive Title IV aid. Academic department/program/advisor decisions and Graduate Office re-admission and degree candidacy decisions are completely separate from Title IV financial aid determinations.

Important Academic Progress Reminders:

  • As expressed in years: The maximum time frame for which a student receives Title IV aid toward his/her graduate program cannot exceed 150% of the published or standard length of the program (assuming consecutive semester enrollment) measured in credit hours attempted.
  • Withdrawals: Grades of W are counted as courses attempted and count toward the maximum time frame.
  • Audited Courses: Students do not earn any academic credits for audited courses. They do not count in the calculation of “attempted credits.”
  • Pass/Fail Courses: These credits do count in the calculation of “attempted credits” and “earned credits.”
  • Change in Majors: Students who change their majors will normally be expected to complete all degree requirements before reaching 150% of the required credits for their specific graduate program.
  • Attempted credits are those hours for which students were still officially registered at the conclusion of each semester’s Add/Drop period. Withdrawals are counted as “attempted credits” when reviewing student’s satisfactory academic progress.
  • Note: a grade of “U” counts as a failing grade in GPA calculations

Student Refund Information and Policies

Students who withdraw from the University, or change their status from full-time to parttime, after the semester begins must complete the appropriate forms in the Registrar’s Office. The date of notification and the date the room is vacated are used in the calculation of tuition and board refunds. The amount of refund is determined in accordance with the schedule below. Fees, room charges and audited courses are not refundable. Students who receive federally funded financial aid will have their refunds determined according to the guidelines issued by the U.S. Department of Education.

Students considering withdrawal before the conclusion of a semester are encouraged to contact the One-Stop Shop and the Office of Enrollment Management in order to obtain a detailed estimate of the financial implication of their withdrawal.

Refund Information: Fall and Spring Semesters

Withdrawal Tuition
Charge
Refund Board
Charge
Refund
Within the 1st week of classes 10% 90% 10% 90%
After the 1st week and before the end of the 2nd week 20% 80% 15% 85%
After the 2nd week and before the end of the 3rd week 40% 60% 20% 80%
After the 3rd week and before the end of the 4th week 60% 40% 25% 75%
After the 4th week and before the end of the 5th week 80% 20% 30% 70%

Tuition refunds for students remaining enrolled but withdrawing from a specific course will not be made after the fifth week of the semester.

Refund Information: 7-Week Accelerated Courses

Withdrawal Tuition
 Charge
Refund
Within the 1st week of classes 15% 85%
After the 1st week and before the end of the 2nd week 30% 70%
After the 2nd week and before the end of the 3rd week 45% 55%
After the 3rd week and before the end of the 4th week 60% 40%
After the 4th week and before the end of the 5th week 100% 0%

Tuition refunds for students remaining enrolled but withdrawing from a specific course will not be made after the fourth week of the semester.

Graduate Summer Sessions

For Summer Session I, a refund of 50 percent is allowed for withdrawal within the first week of class. For Summer II, III and workshops, the refund allowed is 50 percent before the third class meeting.