- March 6th, 2012, 11:32 am
#383709
Though affordability remains a priority at Liberty, the average debt for students graduating in 2010 was $27,663, higher than the state average. The estimate includes federal and private loans for undergraduate residential students, said Rob Ritz, LU’s executive director of financial aid. Liberty did not provide a figure for online students.http://www2.newsadvance.com/news/2012/m ... r-1736194/
Liberty’s blend of online and residential programs allows the university to keep tuition on the low end for private schools, LU officials said.
“There’s not anything more important you can do to help a student stay out of debt than to keep your cost of tuition down,” said LU Chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr.
Liberty’s loan default rate was 4.8 percent for students entering repayment in 2009-10, according to data from the U.S. Department of Education. The rate includes residential and online students, with the latter now comprising the bulk of Liberty’s enrollment. Liberty has about 12,560 residential students and 80,000 online.
Liberty officials point out that the university’s default rate falls well below many of their online competitors in the for-profit sector, which have come under scrutiny for their high default rates.
“There was a concern at one time that online students would just take a course here and a course there, and they might be somebody who is chronically unemployed, but that’s not the case,” Falwell said. “These are people who are out there working. They’re taking more education to move up ... So the outcome’s pleasing to us, the fact that they’re paying their loans back.”
All schools that administer federal loan programs are required to provide financial counseling that educations students about their loans. Liberty has expanded on that requirement by creating more than 60 YouTube-style videos about money management.
“We are pushing financial literacy online more than ever before,” said Ritz. “We have links to videos and information on handling their money, handling a checking card, credit card debt. . . That’s all in addition to the government required entrance counseling.”
By next fall, Liberty plans to implement special programming for at-risk students, such as those who have defaulted on past loans. It’s part of a long-term strategy to keep default rates down, Ritz said.