Bill

Bill > ACR68


NJ ACR68

NJ ACR68
Urges Secretary of Higher Education and Educational Opportunity Fund Board to study and modernize program regulations, particularly regulations related to student funding priority levels.


summary

Introduced
01/09/2024
In Committee
01/09/2024
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/12/2026

Introduced Session

2024-2025 Regular Session

Bill Summary

The Educational Opportunity Fund (EOF) program, established by State law in 1968, supports educationally and economically disadvantaged students for undergraduate and graduate study at public and private institutions of higher education in New Jersey. The EOF program, in part, provides direct financial aid to students through Opportunity Grants, which assist students in meeting college expenses, such as fees, books, room, board, and transportation, that are not covered by the State's Tuition Aid Grant program. Current EOF regulations specify that institutions are to award Opportunity Grant funds to students in the following priority order: 1) renewal students who were given awards during the previous academic year; 2) first-time, full-time freshmen; 3) EOF transfer students who received an EOF student grant at another institution, in the preceding academic year; 4) renewal students readmitted or returning to the program who did not receive awards in the prior academic year; and 5) eligible students who do not fall into any of the other four categories. Under this structure, a high school graduate who has, for example, earned an associate degree through participation in a dual enrollment program is not considered a "first-year student" and is thus placed in the lowest EOF funding priority level as opposed to being considered in the second funding priority level if the student had not attained an associate degree. The structure creates a disincentive for students to participate in dual enrollment and other college readiness programs that the Legislature and several administrations have strived to establish and encourage. This resolution urges the Secretary of Higher Education and the Educational Opportunity Fund Board of Directors, who respectively administer and govern the program, to study and modernize current EOF regulations, specifically regulations that negatively impact students who have earned 24 or more college credits while in high school. Dual enrollment programs allow high schools to partner with an institution of higher education to offer coursework that can be applied toward completion of a postsecondary degree.

AI Summary

This joint resolution urges the New Jersey Secretary of Higher Education and the Educational Opportunity Fund (EOF) Board of Directors to study and modernize the current EOF program regulations, which currently disadvantage students who have earned significant college credits through dual enrollment or other high school college readiness programs. The EOF program, established in 1968, provides financial aid to educationally and economically disadvantaged students, but its current funding priority structure creates an unintended disincentive for students to participate in programs like dual enrollment. Specifically, the resolution calls for a comprehensive review of regulations that place students who have earned an associate degree during high school at the lowest funding priority level, which could result in lower grant amounts or exclusion from EOF programs. The resolution requests that the Secretary conduct a study to identify potential conflicts between current regulations and the state's educational policy goals, evaluate ways to modernize the regulations, and share findings with legislative education committees. By highlighting this issue, the resolution aims to ensure that students who proactively pursue college credits in high school are not penalized in the financial aid process.

Committee Categories

Education

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Higher Education Committee (on 01/09/2024)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...