College for Texans - Paying
Register for the Selective Service or are exempt from this requirement. Where may the awards be used? Only private, non-profit Texas colleges or universities may participate in the program. How much can be awarded? The program maximum is $3,331 per school year. However, students with exceptional need (those whose Expected Family Contributions are less than or equal to $1,000) may receive awards of up to $4,966 in a given year. Awards may not exceed the student's financial need or the amount of tuition the student is paying in excess of what he or she would pay at a public institution. How large is the program? 29,412 students received TEG awards in 2005-06. How can I apply? Complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).
Category: Tuition Grants
Human Resource Development - Tuition Assistance
[ Forms and Procedures ] [ Eligibility ] [ Tax Exemption ] [ Department Budgets ] Introduction One of the ways in which Dalhousie University encourages learning opportunities and professional development for faculty and staff is through the Tuition Assistance Program. This program has two major components: tuition waiver and tuition reimbursement. Tuition waiver refers to a waiver of fees for credit and non-credit courses taken at Dalhousie (to the extent permitted). Tuition reimbursement (partial or total) refers to the reimbursement of fees for credit courses taken at another University (or at another educational institution, professional association, or institute, where applicable) upon completion of those courses. There is provision made, in certain circumstances, for cost sharing of courses under the Tuition Assistance Program. Tuition assistance is generally considered a taxable benefit. This is not the case if the course is job-related, as specified by the Canada Revenue Agency. Employee and Organizational Development/Human Resources administers the Tuition Assistance Program for faculty and staff groups. No uniform arrangement applies to all faculty and staff since different employee groups have negotiated or sought differing arrangements. Forms and Procedures Tuition Waiver (Dalhousie courses) Printable Waiver Form Waiver Procedures Program Fee Degree Information Tuition Reimbursement (non-Dalhousie courses) - For CCS, DPMG and NSGEU group members only Printable Reimbursement Form Reimbursement Procedures Eligibility University faculty and staff who are employed full-time or 50% or greater of full time qualify for tuition assistance, provided that:
Category: Partial Reimbursement Tuition
Michigan State University College of Law Information, Alumni, History, Campus, Students, Faculty, Address, Tuition, and Football
Michigan State University College of Law Summary The Michigan State University College of Law, established in 1891 as the Detroit College of Law, was the first law school in the Detroit, Michigan area and the second in the U. S. state of Michiga Although it operates as a constituent college of the university, the college of law remains financially independent and receives no state or university funding. The MSU College of Law excels considerably in the areas of intellectual property and communications law, for which it was ranked among the top 20 schools by U. S. News and World Report for 200 Law journals at the law school include the Michigan State Law Review, the school’s flagship journal, and the Journal of Business and Securities Law, one of the only nationally published student-run law journals dedicated to the leading issues confronting attorneys in the worlds of business/corporation law and securities law. Summary content courtesy of Wikipedia. Comment and Corrections Make a comment … Familiar with this University? We would love to hear about your experience. Feel free to add comments or additional information regarding Michigan State University College of Law.
Category: University Of Michigan Tuition
Tax Information
IMPORTANT 2006 TAX CHANGES Special IRS instructions for taxpayer who want to claim the above-the-line tuition deduction. Congress belatedly reinstated the tuition and fees tax deduction in December retroactively (it had expired January 1, 2006). The IRS had already sent its paper forms to the printer before Congress acted, so there is no place on the form 1040 for the deduction. Further, IRS needs to reprogram its software (and so will the on-line and software providers presumably) to allow for the deduction, so the key piece of advice is that no returns claiming the tuition and fee deduction should be filed until early February. More information including instructions on how to fill out paper forms, is available at: www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=165640,00.html Note: the above does not constituete official guidance. Please consult a tax professional regarding your particular tax situation. Tax Relief Act of 1997 The Tax Relief Act of 1997 may provide you with an opportunity for tax savings through the Hope Scholarship Credit and the Lifetime Learning Tax Credit. These two tax credits are based on payments made for tuition and certain related educational costs. The Hope Scholarship Tax Credit enables a taxpayer to claim a tax credit of up to $1,500 per eligible student for the cost of qualified tuition and related expenses pertaining to the first two years of post secondary education. To be eligible, the student must be enrolled as a first or second year student in an undergraduate degree program, and must be enrolled at least half-time for at least one term during the tax year.
Category: 2006 Deduction Fee Tuition
CSU Campus News - The Coloradoan - www.coloradoan.com
Nonresident undergraduate students currently pay $14,994 annually for full-time tuition, compared to $3,466 for residents. The rate for nonresident graduate students is $15,642 and $4,248 for residents. The funding proposal, which Gov. Bill Ritter said he supports, does not place a cap on the amount CSU and other state higher education institutes can raise tuition for nonresidents. Ritter said each institution can raise tuition at rates they deem necessary;, but if any go too high, they will price their school out of the nation's higher education market. "CSU is not wrong in saying that it is behind its peer institutions (in out-of-state tuition rates), but every institution in Colorado is behind if you look at funding rates," Ritter said Wednesday. "CSU is a place that educates a lot of kids from Colorado, and we're trying to ensure that CSU (can increase) funding but that we not do that on the backs on middle-income and lower-middle income kids." Initial reaction from some nonresident CSU students was unfavorable. "I kind of think it's discrimination against out-of-state students," said Jennifer Negron, a 19-year-old marketing sophomore from Missouri who is paying tuition with student loans and a full-time job at Walgreen's. "I would be all right with the tuition increase if, for every percent of an increase we have, President Penley would decrease his salary by the same percentage. That way he could know what the financial hardship of students feels like," Negron said. The CSU Board of Governors, which determines tuition increases for CSU students, will take a look at the nonresident tuition rate at its June board meeting, said CSU spokesman Brad Bohlander. The board routinely looks at tuition rates in the early summer of each year. The funding compromise comes in the wake of a failed Senate amendment CSU pushed to the state's budget that would have allowed the university to collect an additional $34 million in tuition - coming from both in-state and out-of-state students. That move, which caught Ritter and key lawmakers by surprise, would have increased some in-state students' tuition next year by as much as 40 percent, according to the Colorado Department of Higher Education.
Category: Out Of State Tuition