NCAA campus visit AND Athlete retention
Student/faculty advice to past selves continued
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April 26, 2013 Volume 84 Issue 26 echo.snu.edu
TheEcho
6612 NW 42nd St. Bethany, OK 73008 (405) 491-6382 Dr. Gresham, administrators answer study abroad funding questions Brad Crofford, Editor-In-Chief After university president Loren Gresham’s outlining of changes to the study abroad funding policy at a campus meeting last week, the students, faculty and staff in attendance had numerous questions. In fall 2013, the $4,000 and $2,500 caps for international studies majors and non-international studies majors will already be in place, but during this semester, students who had been accepted to programs by April 1 can apply to have more funding based on personal need. This would be determined on a case by case basis. According to Dr. Scott Strawn,
vice president for financial affairs, the person to contact for this would be Diana Lee, director of financial aid. “We talked about Diana Lee in financial aid, that she would use their EFC [expected family contribution] and that financial need would be the major factor we would utilize,” Strawn said. Strawn says that higher education consulting company Noel Levitz has played an important role in changing the way the university distributes financial aid. “I think it’s actually the most equitable and fair way, to really look at a student’s ability to pay as a key
measure for how much support cerns about the narrower range of you provide for their opportunity approved programs. Professor Michelle Bowie stated that based on to be here at SNU,” Strawn said. her and her daughter’s research, some of the sister school programs are more akin to literary or historical field studies trips. This is because the students travel with a professor instead of living in a more immersive context. “They’re not living on a camOne concern raised by faculty pus and they’re not living with a was whether there would be a list of approved sister school (that is, host family and doing that kind of Nazarene) study abroad programs thing. It’s more of a literary field to aid faculty in advising. Gresham studies/historical field studies kind said that provost Mary Jones would of thing where they’re just touring more than the live-in experience make and distribute this list. Several participants raised con- that our students get in the other programs,” Bowie said. “They get full credit, but they’re not immersed in the culture in the same way.”
“They’re not immersed...in the same way”
QERC and Morningstar
Funding for study at the Quetzal Educational Research Center (QERC) and the Morningstar Institute will remain unchanged. These programs may become increasingly popular with students due to some upcoming changes. When asked about potentially expanding QERC to apply for courses of study outside of environmental science and biology, Jones said there have been conversations about that, including psychology. The Morningstar Institute primarily focuses on business and Photo from senior Nat Oliveira, studying abroad in Spain.
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