Philosophy
Pomona College has a comprehensive need-based financial aid program for students who enroll as degree-seeking students. Students are admitted to Pomona without consideration of their financial circumstances, except in the case of international students. The Office of Financial Aid coordinates funding from federal, state, private and institutional resources to ensure an offer of financial aid that meets the full demonstrated need of each student as determined by the Office of Financial Aid.
In awarding its own funds, the College assumes that students and their parents are the first and primary source of funding for a student’s education. The various sources of financial aid are secondary resources to fill the funding gap between the cost of attending and what the family can reasonably provide. Pomona’s policy generally is to exclude students from being considered financially independent of their parents for college-administered scholarship aid unless a student is an orphan, a ward of the court, or at least 25 years of age. Spouses of married undergraduate students also share in the responsibility to meet educational costs. Pomona expects financial aid applicants to apply for and use resources from state, federal, and private funding sources, contribute from their earnings during non-enrollment periods (for example, summer) and use earnings from part-time employment during the academic year to meet educational expenses.
The amount of aid each student receives varies according to each family’s individual circumstances. All students applying for financial aid, whether first-time first year applicants or currently enrolled students, must submit all required documents in order to be considered for financial aid. For complete details on Pomona College aid programs, consult our publication Financial Aid Handbook, which is available on the Pomona College website.
How to Apply
Candidates for admission who wish to apply for financial aid must submit the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) to be considered for federal financial aid and some types of state aid; the federal Title IV code is 001173. Students must also submit the College Scholarship Service (CSS) Profile to be eligible for institutional aid. Pomona’s CSS code is 4607. Applicants are encouraged to include on the CSS Profile or write directly to the Pomona College Office of Financial Aid, any special circumstances they feel affect their ability to pay for college. Please refer to the Office of Financial Aid website or the Pomona College financial aid brochure, Affordable Excellence, for details on financial aid application procedures..
California State Aid Programs
All Pomona College applicants who meet the California residency requirements must apply for aid through the California Student Aid Commission. US citizens and permanent residents must submit a FAFSA and have their high school submit their verified GPA by March 2 to be considered for state grant eligibility for the upcoming academic year. DACA and undocumented students who meet the eligibility requirements of AB540 must submit the CA Dream Act Application to be considered. For additional information, please visit the Cal Grants website, email studentsupport@csac.ca.gov, call 888-224-7268, or write directly to the California Student Aid Commission, Student Support Services Branch P.O. Box 419027, Rancho Cordova, CA 95741-9027.
Renewal of Aid
Financial aid applications must be completed each year. A student and their family may assume that the College will continue to provide comparable assistance for subsequent years insofar as the family’s financial circumstances remain consistent from year to year. As circumstances change, financial aid may also change. It is important to understand that financial aid administered by the College is not renewed automatically. Parents and students must complete and submit the necessary forms and documents each year (i.e. CSS Profile, FAFSA/CA Dream Act Application, parent and student federal tax returns). At Pomona, financial aid is awarded based on demonstrated financial need rather than academic measures. However, students must make satisfactory academic progress toward graduation in order to maintain eligibility for financial aid funding.
It is the responsibility of the student to submit a complete financial aid application (CSS Profile, FAFSA/CA Dream Act Application, parent and student federal tax returns and follow-up forms) before established deadlines. Deadline dates are priority deadlines and will be enforced according to the availability of aid funding for that year. Those that meet the deadline will be given consideration for assistance first. Other applications will be considered according to the date received and current funding levels.
Terms of Assistance
Students are considered for financial aid eligibility during their first eight semesters of undergraduate enrollment. The Office of Financial Aid considers applicants for need-based grant eligibility beyond the eighth semester only if enrollment is essential to complete the minimum requirements for the first baccalaureate degree or major. Students who have been approved to enroll for more than eight semesters and who are recipients of financial aid will have a loan included on the Offer of Financial Aid in the amount of $5,000 per semester. Students who enroll for a fifth year in pursuit of a minor, a second major or a second degree, are not eligible for financial aid from Pomona. Eligibility for federal student aid is limited to the equivalent of 12 semesters of full-time undergraduate enrollment, including course work taken at other colleges and universities. Students must also maintain satisfactory academic progress to retain financial aid eligibility.
Communication with Students
Pomona’s Office of Financial Aid uses electronic means (such as email and the student portal) as a primary method of communication and of providing financial aid information. Signatures or acknowledgments provided by the student electronically to Pomona via Pomona systems and/or @pomona.edu email are valid and legally binding. Emails sent by financial aid staff to a student’s Pomona email account will be presumed to have been received and read by the student.
Types of Financial Aid Available
Grant aid that Pomona distributes includes the Federal Pell Grant, Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (SEOG), California State Grant, and institutional grants. A description of each of these aid types may be found on the financial aid website. Need based scholarship aid is provided primarily from the College and outside agencies. Students receiving an endowed or restricted scholarship are informed of the donor or source of their scholarship and may be asked to recognize them for their support. To be eligible for grant aid, a student must apply for assistance by completing the CSS Profile and FAFSA/CA Dream Act Application and submitting parent and student tax forms before the established deadline. Receipt of any financial assistance from sources other than Pomona College must be reported to the Office of Financial Aid. These outside awards are coordinated with the current Offer of Financial Aid in order to ensure a student’s total sources of financial aid do not exceed their financial need. When a student receives outside scholarships, these funds reduce or eliminate the student’s responsibility to contribute from job earnings (summer expectation and student employment during the school year). If the total in outside scholarships exceeds the student’s responsibility, the College then reduces institutional scholarship and parent contribution (50%/50% respectively). Outside scholarships may also be used to cover the cost of medical insurance or a one-time computer purchase, if approved by the awarding agency.
Self-Help aid comes in two forms. The first is student employment. Most students receiving need-based financial aid are awarded student employment, which authorizes students to work up to 10 hours per week. The amount awarded represents an opportunity for students to earn money to put toward school-related expenses and represent a maximum that can be earned during the academic year. The exact dollars earned may be influenced by the hours available from the employer and student schedule for a semester. Hours not worked and awarded dollars not earned may be converted to additional loans eligibility. Students are not assigned campus jobs; campus jobs are posted on the online job board Handshake and advertised at the on campus job fair. Students may evaluate positions and apply for the job that best fits their experience, schedule and employment goals. Students may also consider employment with non-profit and community organizations with whom we maintain a contract and working relationship. Earnings are paid to the student directly at the end of each pay period. Students who elect to use direct deposit may have their earnings deposited into the student’s checking or savings account.
The second form of self-help aid is student loans. Loans allow students to finance a portion of their education while enrolled and use future earnings to repay over time. These loans must be repaid after the student has graduated or enrollment has reduced to less than half-time. Most student loans may be deferred if the student continues their education beyond their bachelor’s degree. Federal loan options include Federal Direct Stafford Loans (subsidized and unsubsidized) and Federal Direct PLUS (Parent Loans for Undergraduate Students). A description of each loan, including eligibility, annual loan limits, fees, current interest rates, and repayment terms can be found at the financial aid website.
Student Loan Exit Interviews
All students who have received student loans during their course of study at Pomona College are required to attend an exit interview before leaving the College. This is a requirement for graduation and for students who take a leave of absence or withdraw completely. It is the student’s responsibility to see that this requirement has been met. Exit interview sessions are available online. Questions concerning exit interviews should be directed to the student loan administrator in the Finance Office or to the Office of Financial Aid.
Refund of Financial Aid
If a student has received any financial aid, the Office of Financial Aid calculates the institutional financial aid refund by prorating the scholarships and self-help (i.e., loan and work) to reflect the same percentage of scholarship and self-help contained in the original aid award before the student withdrew. If a student has received any federal aid, the federal refund calculation is performed according to federal regulations. A more detailed description of the financial aid refund and repayment policy is published for general reference by the Office of Financial Aid. Sample refund calculations are also available to students upon request.
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