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Pell Grants

All articles tagged with #pell grants

New federal student loan rules cap borrowing and reshape repayment on July 1
education1 month ago

New federal student loan rules cap borrowing and reshape repayment on July 1

Starting July 1, 2026, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act imposes stricter federal student loan borrowing caps (Parent PLUS: $20,000/year and $65,000 per student; graduate degrees up to $100,000 total; professional degrees up to $200,000 total with a $50,000/year cap) and a lifetime cap of $257,500 per borrower; new borrowers will have only two repayment options (Tiered Standard and the Repayment Assistance Plan, RAP), while current borrowers can stay on existing plans if they don’t take new loans (PAYE/ICR are phased out by 2028). The SAVE program ends in 2028, with a 90‑day window for borrowers to choose a new plan; Pell Grants tighten eligibility and expand to shorter-term, high‑skill programs. Borrowers should contact their loan servicers, update their contact information, and use calculators to compare options.

Debate Heats Up Over School Choice and Vouchers
education1 year ago

Debate Heats Up Over School Choice and Vouchers

The 'One Big Beautiful Bill' signed into law by President Trump introduces significant changes to federal education policy, including a federal school voucher program, Medicaid and SNAP adjustments affecting school funding and student health services, modifications to federal student loans and Pell Grants, and increased taxes on college endowments, impacting students, schools, and colleges across the U.S.

Duke University Receives Historic $100 Million Donation from Duke Endowment
education2 years ago

Duke University Receives Historic $100 Million Donation from Duke Endowment

Duke University has received a record $100 million gift from the Duke Endowment to expand financial aid and increase socioeconomic diversity among its student body. The donation will help Duke attract students from a broader range of family backgrounds and build on the progress already made in increasing the share of freshmen receiving Pell grants. A portion of the gift will also be used to renovate an academic building named after one of the first African American undergraduates to enroll at Duke.

education3 years ago

Government-funded college education expands to benefit thousands of US prisoners

Thousands of prisoners across the United States will have the opportunity to receive free college education paid for by the government, thanks to the expansion of the federal Pell Grant program. The new rules, which overturn a 1994 ban on Pell Grants for prisoners, aim to address the mass incarceration and racial disparities in the prison population. College degrees obtained by prisoners can significantly increase their chances of finding employment and successfully reintegrating into society upon release. While there are concerns about racial imbalances and limited resources within prisons, advocates believe that providing education to incarcerated individuals can lead to redemption, rehabilitation, and reduced recidivism rates.