Financial Aid Definitions
- Award Offer
- A list of types and amounts of aid that 91¶ÌÊÓƵ and Federal Student Financial Aid are offering. You are not required to accept all aid offered.
- Cost of Attendance (COA)
- This figure includes the total price of tuition, fees, room, board, books, supplies, transportation and personal expenses for the time period of attendance indicated on your 91¶ÌÊÓƵ Financial Aid Application. It is also known as the student budget. Award offers and other resources (scholarships) can never exceed the COA.
- Deferment
- Delaying enrollment or leaving the university for a period of time. Find out what to do to return to Weber.
- Federal Financial Aid
- Aid eligibility that comes from FAFSA processing. At 91¶ÌÊÓƵ, this includes: PELL, SEOG, LEAP, UCOPE, TIERG, Federal Work Study, Perkins loans, Stafford loans and PLUS loans.
- Financial Need
- Equal to your Cost of Attendance (COA) minus your Expected Family Contribution (EFC). See the Terms and Conditions of Federal Financial Aid for additional information.
- Residual Check
- Available funds are applied to student balances several times each week. Once tuition/fees are paid, leftover financial aid funds will be paid to you. 91¶ÌÊÓƵ will create a check for this amount and send it to you through the mail. As another option, you can now enroll in eRefunds to have residual funds directly deposited into a designated checking account.
- Satisfactory Academic Progress
- In order to continue receiving financial aid as an undergraduate/graduate student, you must make satisfactory academic progress by meeting certain academic standards in Pace of Completion, GPA and Maximum time frame. Failure to meet these standards could result in the denial of your financial aid or being placed on warning or probation by the 91¶ÌÊÓƵ Financial Aid and Scholarship Office.
- Student Aid Index (SAI)
- A measure of your financial standing based on income, assets, family size, etc., determined from your FAFSA information. The SAI represents the amount of money the federal government believes you are able to contribute toward college. The amount you end up actually paying could differ from the SAI, depending on what other resources you receive.
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