68 customizable lessons, aligned with National Standards, exams and more.
Read NGPF's school-by-school analysis of financial education in America today
Activities
Advocacy
Behavioral Economics
Best Of
Budgeting
Buying a Car
Career
Checking
Consumer Skills
Credit
Cryptocurrencies
Current Events
Curriculum Announcements
Economics
Entrepreneurship
Edpuzzle
ELL Resources
FinCap Friday
Gambling and Sports Betting
Insurance
Interactive
Investing
Math
Paying for College
Philanthropy
Podcasts
Press Releases
Professional Development
Question of the Day
Savings
So Expensive Series
Taxes
Teacher Talk
The key news regarding paying for college involves the restart of Federal Student Loan repayments this fall, the Supreme Court’s decision to prevent the Biden Student Loan Forgiveness plan to proceed, and the upcoming FAFSA changes. Read on for more detail.
Loan Repayment
The “Pandemic Pause” is ending, and the repayment of student loans will begin again in the fall. In negotiations to lift the debt ceiling a few months ago, it was agreed that repayments would resume. The Biden administration is putting a policy into affect that will ease the penalties over the first twelve months for those who have trouble repaying. The “12-month on-ramp,” was announced shortly after the Supreme Court Ruling was issued stopping the Biden debt forgiveness plan (CNBC) and was triggered by a CFPB estimate that 1 in 5 borrowers will have trouble resuming payments. (CNBC2)
The Biden administration has been working on a separate revision to repayment plans called “Saving on a Valuable Education” or SAVE. Some of the proposed provisions include $0 payments if you are making less than $15/hour. Another proposal would be to allow those who borrowed under $12,000 to be granted forgiveness after 10 years of payments (rather than 20 or 25.) (Inside Higher Education)
Aftermath of the Supreme Court Rulings
What avenues still exist for student loan forgiveness or at least ways to pay less than the total owed? The NYT contributor Ron Lieber collected all the information with references to articles with clarifying details on existing plans. (Just remember that these apply to Federal, not private loans.)
There was other big news recently on the forgiveness front as well. Over 800,000 borrowers will receive a letter soon granting them loan forgiveness totaling $39 billion. These are people that should have qualified for forgiveness under one of the income-based repayment plans, but because of miscommunication and mismanagement by the loan servicers, were told they didn’t qualify. This followed a huge review of the broken system. (NPR) Read/listen to this article to get more detail, particularly if you think this might apply to you!
FAFSA Changes for 2023-24
Interest rates and fees for disbursements were announced for this year (Department of Education):
Other changes for 2023-24
FAFSA Changes for 2024-25 (Saving for College) (CNBC)
For more details on the changes, I would suggest reading the Saving for College article.
Resources:
The Department of Education has a calculator/tool that allows you to investigate your repayment options. It is called the Loan Simulator.
Link to the new SAI calculations and Pell Eligibility descriptions (2024-25).
Changes are coming to FAFSA! and other stuff you don't want to miss
What's New with Investing 2023
Question of the Day: How much did Taylor Swift's Eras Tour gross during its two-year, 149 concert run?
Use NGPF's Online Banking Simulation to Bring Real-World Skills Into the Classroom
NEW Activity - MOVE: Interest Rate Ripple Effect (FOMC Press Conference Sep 18, 2024)
Beth Tallman entered the working world armed with an MBA in finance and thoroughly enjoyed her first career working in manufacturing and telecommunications, including a stint overseas. She took advantage of an involuntary separation to try teaching high school math, something she had always dreamed of doing. When fate stepped in once again, Beth jumped on the opportunity to combine her passion for numbers, money, and education to develop curriculum and teach personal finance at Oberlin College. Beth now spends her time writing on personal finance and financial education, conducts student workshops, and develops finance curricula and educational content. She is also the Treasurer of Ohio Jump$tart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy.
Join the more than 12,000 teachers who get the NGPF daily blog delivered to their inbox:
MOST POPULAR POSTS
1
2
Get Festive with NGPF Resources and Activities
3
Useful Personal Finance Movies and Documentaries with Worksheets
4
NEW Holiday Personal Finance Posters
5
NEW NGPF Review Materials Released
Before your subscription to our newsletter is active, you need to confirm your email address by clicking the link in the email we just sent you. It may take a couple minutes to arrive, and we suggest checking your spam folders just in case!
Great! Success message here
New to NGPF?
Save time, increase engagement, and teach life-changing financial skills with NGPF’s free curriculum
1.Register for a free TeacherAccount
2.ExploreSemester Course
3.Findstudent favorites
4.LeverageNGPF Academy
Your new account will provide you with access to NGPF Assessments and Answer Keys. It may take up to 1 business day for your Teacher Account to be activated; we will notify you once the process is complete.
Thanks for joining our community!
The NGPF Team
Complete the form below to access exclusive resources for teachers. Our team will review your account and send you a follow up email within 24 hours.
To speed up your verification process, please submit proof of status to gain access to answer keys & assessments.
Acceptable information includes:
Acceptable file types: .png, .jpg, .pdf.
Once you submit this form, our team will review your account and send you a follow up email within 24 hours. We may need additional information to verify your teacher status before you have full access to NGPF.
Take the quiz to quickly find the best resources for you!