New Pell Grant Policy to Hurt Non-traditional Native Students

Apr 23, 2012 | Archives, Blog

Many non-traditional students reenter college many years after a first unsuccessful try at higher education. They may have been unsuccessful due to poor study skills; poor preparation for college due to ineffective high schools; lack of discipline; lack of financial or family support; or a combination of several factors.

When faced with low-wage jobs, many Natives, like their non-Native counterparts, decide to re-enter college to earn a degree so that they can provide a better life for themselves and their families.

Yet non-traditional students must joggle many more obligations than a student entering college directly from high school. There are work and family obligations, which can limit the number of credit hours a non-traditional student can take per semester. As a result, the road to earning a degree is longer.

Pell Grants are now limited to 12 semesters, down from 18 semesters. In addition, if a non-traditional student received a Pell Grant during his or her earlier college semesters, those semesters will be deducted from the students’ total eligibility. As a result, non-traditional students will often exhaust their Pell Grant funding before they have earned their degrees.

The new Pell Grant regulations will also disproportionately impact American Indians, which have the highest poverty rate in the nation combined with the lowest college degree attainment (1%) and are heavily reliant on Pell Grants. Non-traditional students comprise a large percentage of enrollees at tribal colleges and universities, which serve Indian reservations and surrounding rural areas. American Indian College Fund (the Fund) scholarship applicants who were non-traditional students age 24 or older comprised 65% of its applicant pool, and nearly 15% of the Fund’s applicants were over.

If you a a student, how will the changes in the Pell Grant regulations impact your college plans?

If you are an American Indian College Fund supporter, what do you think about the changes in the regulation? Will the changes help or hinder President Obama’s goal to increase the nation’s college completion rate by 2020?

Recent Blog Posts

American Indian College Fund Supports Largest Full Circle Scholarship Cohort to Date 

American Indian College Fund Supports Largest Full Circle Scholarship Cohort to Date 

The American Indian College Fund (College Fund) awarded its largest Full Circle scholarship cohort ever, with nearly 2,000 Native students receiving awards. The Full Circle Scholarship Program is open to any Native American U.S. citizen who is an enrolled member or descendant of an enrolled member of a state or federally recognized tribe. Applicants must have a minimum 2.0 grade point average, and plan to enroll as a full-time student at a nonprofit, accredited college or university. 

Circle of Hope Summer / Fall 2024

| Summer / Fall 2024 | Circle of Hope With Supplementary Funding Ending, Support is More Critical than EverDear Friends and Relatives, Wishing you all a happy fall – and sharing my enthusiasm and excitement, we are back in school! I am so happy we have been able to...