Under this heading are scholarships (awards for academic
achievement, community service, demonstrated leadership, etc.) and grants
(funding to meet a student’s need). These programs reduce school costs but
do not require repayment and/or work to receive the funds.
Maryville has a broad range of institutional scholarship
programs from the Presidential Scholarship which is for incoming, full-time
freshmen and covers tuition, room and board, Achievement Awards for both
incoming freshmen and new transfer students, endowed scholarships which are
gifts to the University from alumni, friends and philanthropic organizations
for new and returning students and programs restricted to specific majors.
Freshman may also apply to participate in the M-Pact Scholarship Program to
earn funding for creating programs, events, etc on campus which have an
impact on the stude4nt population. The PTK Scholarship is a supplement to
the Transfer Achievement Award for junior college transfers who were a
member of this academic organization. Funding is limited so be certain to
apply early and follow up until the award notice is received.
The University also participates in federal grant
programs (Pell, Academic Competitiveness and SMART Grant as well as the
Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants), State
grant and scholarships (Gallagher, Bright Flight, Toss Barnett, and Teacher
Scholarships) and our own Maryville Grant
Program.
Scholarships awarded directly to the student from outside
sources are part of the award becoming part of the total package. Students
need to notify the University when they receive notification of any
privately funded scholarship.
Student Loans (repaid with interest after leaving school)
and campus employment (working on campus and deducting earnings from
tuition) may reduce both direct (tuition, fees, campus residence, books) and
indirect costs (living expenses, transportation, day care).
Federal loans allow students to defer payment until after
leaving the University. Some loans carry an interest subsidy. All currently have
long-term repayment and fixed, low interest. There are also privately
funded alternative loan programs designed to supplement funds
from institutionally administered programs. These are not federally insured and
usually carry a higher interest rate, mandatory cosigner and/or favorable
credit history.
Campus employment is jobs arranged through the financial
aid office that can be either on or off campus, partially or completely
funded by the University and requiring five to fifteen hours per week
throughout the semester. Students may receive their payroll checks or deduct
the amount of the award from the balance due and signing paychecks over to
their student account throughout the semester as the assigned hours are
worked.
Your award may come from federal, state, institutional or
private sources. Many (but not all) Financial aid programs are "need based"
which is determined by the federal government's formula which affixes a
value to a family's income and assets. That value is the family's "ability
to pay" which once formulated and sent to the University by the processor
for the Department of Education is deducted from a school's costs (tuition,
fees, dorm, books, miscellaneous, etc.) to establish a family’s’ need.
Financial awards are a combination of available aid from
the scholarships, grants, loans and employment programs for which students
have established eligibility put together into a "Package." The bottom line
is important but the components and the type of aid each represents are
equally crucial in your decision process to determine the best financial aid
options available to you.
The determination of aid is
affected by many factors: family size, timing, grade level, state of
residence, previous funding, etc. Changes in any of these may create a
change in either the programs or amounts of both. Be certain to complete the
student portion of the process as soon as possible to avoid diminishing
funds and missing deadlines. Be responsive to communications from the
Financial Aid Office whether by mail, email, phone or all three.
Your best resource is communication. Keep in touch with your Counselor, your
academic advisor and the Financial Aid personnel to make certain all is as
it should be. The earlier aid is determined, offered and accepted, the
better for all especially you.