Jenna Bunker chose Gustavus Adolphus College because “something clicked” and she received a grant to help cut down the private school costs. But she’s keenly aware that the state is about to roll out a new free tuition program that might incentivize others to choose public schools instead.
So Bunker and dozens of other private college students have been popping by Minnesota lawmakers’ offices this session, urging them to provide more scholarship money for people like them, arguing that a student’s economic status shouldn’t limit their educational choices.
“Higher education is very essential for some jobs and some careers,” Bunker said. It’s about providing “equal opportunities for all students.”
One year ago, Minnesota lawmakers created the North Star Promise program to cover tuition and fees at Minnesota public schools for residents whose families make less than $80,000 per year. The first awards will go out this fall, and higher education leaders say it will be months before they develop a better sense of how the program might change college recruitment.
State officials estimate that 11,000 students will qualify for North Star Promise scholarships, but caution that it’s too early to be certain. The federal government was late releasing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid — the form used to calculate which grants and loans students receive — so many schools are just starting to receive the data they need to compile students’ aid offers. That means many families are still waiting on the information they need to understand their college costs and make their decisions for the upcoming school year.
“It’s a little too early to say how it’s going to affect us,” University of St. Thomas President Rob Vischer said of North Star Promise scholarships. But he acknowledged that it’s already pushed leaders there to more proactively share information about scholarships and other opportunities for students to cut their college costs.
Gustavus Adolphus College and Concordia College in Moorhead are among the private schools launching new scholarship programs this fall that aim to compete with the new program. North Dakota State University announced it will offer free tuition for one year, and officials overseeing public universities in South Dakota just announced they’re dropping tuition rates for Minnesotans.
‘A different environment’
Lawmakers who supported North Star Promise said they wanted to encourage more students to study and eventually work in Minnesota, reverse years of enrollment declines that strained some schools’ finances, and reduce racial and economic disparities in higher education.