![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
Negotiation and Professional Judgment
Negotiation refers to the idea that you can haggle with the financial
aid office to get a better financial aid package. Very few schools do
negotiation, and those that do, do so only according to set
policies. Colleges are not car dealerships, where
bluff and bluster will get you a better deal. You cannot play one
school off another, to get them in a bidding war for a student.
Students are effectively commodities, with very little bargaining power.
On the other hand, colleges do have the authority to make adjustments
to a student's financial aid package in cases involving unusual
circumstances through a process known as Professional Judgment.
Most cases of negotiation are simply misidentified cases of
professional judgment. For example, a family might get two different
financial aid offers from similar schools, and try to negotiate with
one school to match the other school's offer. The first school asks
the family whether there were any unusual circumstances that they told
to the second school but not the first. Sometimes it is merely a
matter of the second school getting more recent information. In other
cases the school's financial aid application might include questions
designed to elicit information about unusual
circumstances. When the first school finds out about the
unusual circumstances, they are able to make an adjustment to
compensate for the unusual circumstances. This often results in an
improved financial aid offer.
Understanding the Process
Regardless of whether you call it negotiation or professional
judgment, it is important to understand how the process works in order
to maximize the amount of student aid.
FinAid has an extensive section devoted to the topic of
professional judgment from the
perspective of the financial aid administrator. Although this section
contains more than 100
pages of principles, philosophy and examples, it includes a lot of
jargon and technical analyses. Rather than force you to read it, here
are some of the key points:
The financial aid administrator is the final authority. If the circumstances
merit, they can adjust the financial aid package to compensate, no matter
how much the change. But the key is the financial aid administrator has to
be able to document the circumstances and their financial impact on the
family, and show how this affects ability to pay. Typically this is by
adjusting the inputs to the financial aid formulas, and letting the formula
compute the new aid package. A financial aid administrator cannot (and does
not) give you more money simply because you ask for it, or because he/she
sympathizes with you, or because his daughter is in love with your son.
Everything has to be justified in an objective fashion. The US
Department of Education audits the universities very frequently, and if a
professional judgment case is not supported with documentation and clear
reasoning about the relationship between the unusual circumstances and
ability to pay, the school will have to repay the aid to the federal
government. So aid administrators are always extremely careful to document
their cases and to provide backup for their decisions.
Professional judgment is initiated by the family writing a letter to
the financial aid administrator at the school asking for a
"Professional Judgment Review". At some schools this is called a
"Special Circumstances Review". The letter should summarize the
unusual circumstances and include copies of the documentation. The
letter should be short and stick to the facts, instead of burying them
in a long-winded plea for help. The financial aid administrator may
ask for additional information and additional documentation.
Do not include the letter with your original FAFSA application, as it
will be discarded. The letter should be sent separately to the
student's college.
Some people who promote the idea that you can negotiate with colleges
recommend that the student and not the parents contact the school. The
reasoning is that the student is the one seeking help, not the
parents, and it is harder to say no to a student who desperately wants
to be able to attend the college. After all, it is ultimately the
student's decision of where to go, so pleas for help from the student
are more heart-rending. Unfortunately, although this probably doesn't
hurt, it doesn't help either. The negotiation process with colleges
is driven by documentation of special circumstances, not emotional
appeals. Personal requests for help may have more of an effect in
getting a student admitted off of the waiting list than for improving
a school's financial aid package.
Schools that Negotiate
An unpublished 1996 survey of 1,492 colleges conducted by the National
Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators and the College
Board found that only 1% of public colleges and 2% of private colleges
frequently or always adjust financial aid packages to reflect other
college's offers. The survey also found that 5% of public colleges and
10% of private colleges adjusted financial aid packages in response to
the family's stated inability to pay (i.e., a professional judgment
review). Nationwide, approximately 5% of Pell Grant recipients are the
beneficiary of a professional judgment adjustment.
(The survey was repeated in
2001
with similar results.)
This indicates that although very few schools "negotiate", there are
nevertheless a handful that do. Most of those that do use a rigid
policy to determine when they will match other school's financial aid
offers. Usually the schools will only match offers from a limited
number of schools that the college considers to be its peers (i.e.,
similar quality schools for which the college competes for
students). Usually the peer schools are in the same geographic area
and cost about the same. The schools never get into bidding wars for
students.
Leveraging refers to the practice of offering slightly better
financial aid packages (usually by only $500 or $1,000) to middle
income students who are predicted to have a 3.75 or higher GPA at the
college. Research has shown that "sweetening the pot" for middle
income students is an effective inducement to enroll, but not for
lower income and wealthy students.
Some colleges have switched from using their own need analysis
methodology for the awarding of the college's own funds to using the
Federal need analysis methodology. This usually gives a little more
aid to a handful of students, since the institutional methodology
considers some aspects of the family finances that are ignored by the
Federal methodology. The administrative savings often balances out the
slight increase in the financial aid budget.
Although most colleges practice need-blind admissions, where financial
need is not considered when selecting which applicants will be
admitted, this is not necessarily the case for students admitted off
of the waiting list. If you are waitlisted, often the quality and
frequency of your contacts with the admissions office will determine
whether you are admitted off of the waiting list. But sometimes
indicating a willingness to forgo financial aid will get you
admitted. But you should never do this if you cannot afford to attend
the school with no financial aid, as such students will not get any
aid, not even in subsequent years.
One area where a few schools will sometimes negotiate is their outside
scholarship policy. A school's outside scholarship policy dictates how
the school reduces the financial aid package when the student wins a
private scholarship. Federal overaward regulations require the school
to reduce the financial aid package to compensate for outside
scholarships when total aid exceeds demonstrated financial need. So
the school cannot increase the amount of financial aid you
receive. However, there is a little wiggle room in deciding how to
reduce the aid package. For example, the school could reduce loans
before reducing grants. Since grants are better than loans, replacing
a loan with all or part of an outside scholarship will benefit the
student. The schools that do this kind of preferential packaging will
only do so for students who are bringing in a large amount of outside
scholarships.
A growing trend among third tier institutions is to award academic
(merit) scholarships, often called the "Presidential Scholarship" or
"Trustee Scholarship". These scholarships are awarded by the
admissions office or the office of the university president, not the
financial aid office. There are a limited number of such awards, and
they are highly competitive. The goal of these awards is to attract
talented students to the school.
If you want to try negotiating with a school, present a better offer
from a competing college and indicate that you will matriculate at the
school if they will match the other school's offer. If the school is
one of the few that matches other institution's offers, they will ask
for a copy of the other school's award letter. They will compare it
with their own financial aid package, and also the costs and student
budget at each school. If there is a genuine difference in
out-of-pocket costs, they might match it (or at least come a little
closer) or they might not.
The schools that will match offers from competing schools are open
about the practice and encourage the students to submit
competing offers. For example, Carnegie Mellon University is famous
for its willingness to reconsider its original offer. This doesn't
mean you'll necessarily get a better offer after the second review,
just that they are willing (some say eager) to take a second look in
response to new information, including better offers from their
competition.
|
| Home | Loans | Scholarships | Savings | Military Aid | Other Types of Aid | Financial Aid Applications Answering Your Questions | Calculators | Beyond Financial Aid | Site Map | About FinAid® |
| Copyright © 2008 by FinAid Page, LLC. All rights reserved. Mark Kantrowitz, Publisher www.FinAid.org |