Governing Documents: Statement of
Principles
Part
1: General Principles of NYSFAAA
- The activities and functions of
NYSFAAA all share the underlying goal of assisting our members, within the
context of their regular occupational responsibilities, to:
o
Ensure financial access to higher education to all the students of
New York State, regardless of
socio-economic status;
o
Provide useful, accurate, and timely information to students and
families about college financial issues;
o
Provide technical assistance, financial counseling, and customer
service tailored to the needs of individual students and their families;
o
Encourage early awareness of college aid programs, financing
opportunities and savings options; and
o
Administer the programs and all other aspects of the profession
with the highest level of efficiency, accuracy, ethics, and professional
behavior.
- The goals above will be
achieved through a variety of NYSFAAA activities, including:
o
Providing direct NYSFAAA scholarships to students within New York State and working
cooperatively with other legitimate scholarship providers and services;
o
Organizing, sponsoring, providing, and participating in professional
and program administration training and mentoring to our members and to appropriate
third-parties;
o
Organizing, sponsoring, providing, and participating in
informational and awareness activities targeted directly to students,
prospective students, and their families; and
o
Working actively with funding providers, regulators, legislators,
and others to promote adequate funding, administrative simplicity, equitable
program rules, and systematic integrity.
Part
2: Professional Values of Aid Administrators:
- Students and families are the
ultimate focus of our profession.
We are bound by a public trust to always interact with students in
the highest ethical and professional context, and to deal with them
honestly regardless of potentially conflicting business objectives.
- Since students are our primary
focus, we endeavor to coordinate and align the needs of our institutions
and the regulatory agencies with the needs of students. It is possible to balance the realities
of regulatory compliance and enrollment management with providing
exceptional financial services to students and families. Our members value their roles as
advocates for the needs of students within the confines of these
processes.
- Our members never charge a fee
(or honoraria) for providing college financing information or for
assisting students and families with the application process. These activities are not a “side-job”, they are part of our professional responsibility. (Reimbursement of travel expenses is not
a “fee”).
- “Professional Judgment” is a
serious responsibility that has been granted to assist us to meet our
commitment to access. This
responsibility should never be taken lightly, but neither should it be
avoided. Our purpose is to provide
a path for students to achieve their educational objectives, not to
provide roadblocks. Thus, the first
consideration in judgments should always be the best interests of the individual
student.
- Our Active Members respect the
role of the Associate Members and their significant contributions to the
achievement of our goals. We will
never exploit these relationships for personal gain, gifts, or other
personal benefits; nor will we engage in behaviors with any vendors that
would give the public cause to question our ethics.
Part
3: Professional Values of Associate Members:
- Our Associate members
understand that NYSFAAA is a professional organization designed to assist,
improve, and advance the profession of collegiate financial aid
administrators. Participation by
Associate Members should be based upon shared values and goals for
providing financial services to students and families, rather than solely
upon opportunities to increase business revenue.
- Business interests should not
be at odds with ethical service to students and families. It is possible to do “good” while still
doing “well” in business pursuits.
Our Associate Members provide appropriate services to students,
families and schools at reasonable prices and never engage in misleading
or unethical business practices.
- Associate members value the
position of the collegiate financial aid professional in providing comprehensive
financial counsel to students and families. Hence, our Associate Members
support the counseling role of the financial aid officer through their
business activities, and will provide collegiate financial services
directly to students/families ONLY as part of a cooperative effort with
the financial aid office. Associate
members will never circumvent the financial aid office or otherwise impair
the office’s ability to counsel students through the vendor’s business or
marketing practices.
- Our members never charge a fee
for providing college financing information or for assisting students and
families with the aid application process.
Profiting from these activities is inconsistent with the values of
NYSFAAA.
Part
4: Aid Office Administration Philosophy
- The primary purpose of the financial
aid office is to provide financial assistance, advice, information, and
education to students who can benefit from higher education but need financial
services to be able to attend.
- The financial aid office should
publish/provide any and all information necessary for the student to have
a clear understanding of his/her rights and responsibilities regarding
financial aid.
- The college or university
should publish budgets annually indicating total student expenses
including tuition and fees, books and supplies, room and board, and
miscellaneous and personal expenses.
- Financial aid should be offered
only after financial need has been established by means of a consistent
and reasonable need analysis system.
The amount of need-based aid offered should not exceed the amount
needed to meet the difference between the students' total educational
expenses and his resources. An
equitable distribution of all financial aid funds should be predicated on
established packaging philosophies and guidelines.
- Parents are expected to assist
their children with educational costs according to their means. Students
are also expected to contribute from their own assets and earnings, from
both summer work and work during the regular term (where appropriate). The amount and type of self-help
assistance expected should be related to the circumstances of the
individual student and family.
- The financial aid office should
review its awarding policies and procedures annually and adjust them to
reflect changes in financial needs and expenses of the students.
- Process and efficiency should
never trump the needs of the individual student. Systems should always be designed to
accommodate exceptional or unusual circumstances.
- Since the amount of financial
assistance awarded reflects the economic circumstances of the student and
his family, the office should refrain from any public announcement of the
amount of need-based aid offered and encourage others to respect the
confidentiality of that information.
- All documents, correspondence,
and conversations between and among the aid applicant, his family, and the
financial aid staff are confidential and entitled to the protection
ordinarily arising from a counseling relationship.
- Financial aid should be administered in such a
manner that other interests, though important, are always balanced against
the needs of the individual student.