In many instances, college costs affect the award calculation under the various grant and scholarship programs HESC administers. As a result, it is particularly important that the institution provide HESC with accurate cost information.
a. Tuition
HESC uses the institution's tuition charge, prorated by term, to calculate TAP and STAP awards. It is also an element in the student budget used to calculate cost of attendance.
For award payment purposes, HESC defines tuition as the charge levied by the institution for the instructional services provided to the student or for the evaluation and supervision of related academic activity, which is required as an integral part of the student's program of study. It does not include any educational or administrative fees.
b. SUNY College Fee
The college fee the State University of New York levied pursuant to an April 1, 1964, financing agreement with the New York State Dormitory Authority is considered a component of tuition for TAP or STAP certification. HESC adds it to the tuition charge and calculates student awards based on this combined charge.
c. Non-resident Tuition at Public Colleges
Generally students who attend New York State public colleges and are charged non-resident tuition are not eligible for TAP or other state awards. However, students subject to non-resident tuition charges can be eligible for TAP and other state awards if they otherwise meet New York State residency requirements for student aid but the public college is required by state law to charge non-resident tuition. The school may certify these students for a TAP award based on the non-resident tuition charge. However, if the student is subject to non-resident tuition as a result of negligence (for example, if an otherwise eligible student at a community college neglects to obtain a county certificate of residence), the school can only certify the student for a TAP award based on resident tuition charges.
d. Calculating Term Tuition Charges
HESC requires institutions participating in the state grant and scholarship programs to report term tuition charges. The methods institutions use to calculate term tuition charges are:
Program Tuition. If a student contract specifies the tuition for an entire program of study and the total amount of study to be provided, the term tuition is the total tuition for the program divided by the number of terms required to complete the program of study.
Annual Tuition. If the institution levies an annual tuition charge without regard to credits or terms, the term tuition charge is the annual tuition charge divided by the number of terms in the regular academic year for which attendance is normally expected or required.
Term Tuition. If the institution levies a tuition charge per-term for a range of credits, the term tuition charge is this amount plus any additional charge for credits exceeding the specified range.
Per Credit Tuition. If the institution charges tuition on a per-credit basis, the term tuition is the per-credit tuition charge multiplied by the number of credits for which the student has registered.
e. Cost of Attendance
Several scholarship and fellowship programs that HESC administers (Scholarships for Academic Excellence, Regents Health Care Scholarships, Regents Professional Opportunity Scholarships, etc.) require using cost of attendance to determine the award amount. For scholarship payment, the cost of attendance consists of the cost per academic year for tuition, required educational fees, books, transportation, room and board, and laboratory and other expenses, as defined below. The cost of attendance allowances for the Memorial Scholarships differ from the allowances cited below. To view the Memorial Scholarship annual educational expenses select Memorial Scholarship Allowances.
Tuition. The actual tuition the institution charges the student.
Educational fees. Library, registration, laboratory and diploma fees. Fees charged primarily for the pleasure, comfort or penalty of the student will be considered non-educational. Such fees include athletic, student publication, health and insurance, student activity, late registration and laboratory breakage fees and graduation assessment costs other than diploma fees.
Books. An amount the institution determines to represent a reasonable cost for books.
Transportation. An amount the institution determines to represent a reasonable cost for travel between the student's residence and the institution and for other travel required to complete a program of study.
Room and board. An amount calculated as follows:
Room and Board Calculation |
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Student Description | Allowance |
Students without dependents living with parents | $1,100 for the academic year |
Students without dependents in housing owned by the institution or institutionally operated housing | The actual amount the institution charges |
Other students without dependents | An allowance based on expenses the student and his/her dependent(s) incur, as determined by the institution |
Students with dependents* |
*A spouse is considered a dependent
Laboratory and other instruction-related expenses. An amount the institution determines to cover the student's costs for laboratory and other instruction-related expenses, including but not be limited to laboratory fees and the cost of all equipment and material that the institution requires to complete any course considered part of the approved program of study.