Archive for Paying for SIPA – Page 18

The Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans

The Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans provide opportunities for continuing generations of able and accomplished New Americans to achieve leadership in their chosen fields. The Program is established in recognition of the contributions New Americans have made to American life and in gratitude for the opportunities the United States has afforded the donors and their family.

The program of fellowships they shaped has the following characteristics:

  • It honors and supports the graduate educations of 30 New Americans – permanent residents or naturalized citizens if born abroad; otherwise children of naturalized citizen parents — each year.
  • At the time of their selection, fellows must be college seniors or early in the graduate programs for which they request support.
  • Each fellow receives tuition and living expenses that can total as much as $90,000 over two academic years.
  • Fellows can study in any degree-granting program in any field at any university in the United States.
  • Fellows are selected on the basis of merit – the specific criteria emphasize creativity, originality, initiative and sustained accomplishment — in annual national competitions.  Candidates apply directly.  The program does not depend on recommendations from universities or regional screening.   Neither financial need nor distributive considerations are taken into account in the selection process.
  • Each fellows attends two weekend conferences of fellows. The great majority continue to be involved with the program through regional dinners, service in the selection process for later classes, etc.

Applications are available on their website: http://www.pdsoros.org/forms/.  The completed application must be submitted via the online applications system or postmarked by NOVEMBER 8, 2013.

For more details, please contact the Soros Program:

Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans
224 West 57th St
New York, NY 10019
Tel: 212-547-6926
Fax: 212-548-4623
 
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.pdsoros.org
 
 

interest rates news

Interest rates has been on the minds of many students thinking about taking out a loan…

Congress recently passed a rare bipartisan bill that set interest rates on federal student loans, The Bipartisan Student Loan Certainty Act of 2013.  While most of the discussion and media attention centered on loans for undergraduates, there is good news for SIPA students.  For all loans first disbursed between July 1, 2013 and June 30, 2014, the interest rate for the Unsubsidized Federal Direct Student Loan has been lowered from 6.8% to 5.41%.  For Graduate PLUS loans, the rate has been reduced from 7.9% to 6.41%.  These rates will be fixed for the life of the loan; the rates on any loans borrowed previously were not changed.

Interest rates will be adjusted annually.  As rates are expected to climb in the coming years, loans for 2014/15 beyond could be higher.  The bill signed by President Obama, in fact, sets caps for rates higher than what they have been; 9.5% and 10.5% respectively.

If you have any questions, please contact the SIPA Financial Aid Office at [email protected] or 212-854-6216.

Office Closed for Labor Day

Columbia University (including the SIPA Admissions & Financial Aid Office) will be closed today, Monday, September 2, 2013. We will resume regular office hours tomorrow.

If you need to speak with us and will not be able to stop by our office after today, please email us at: [email protected] or call us at: 1-212-854-6216.

 

 

Paying your tuition bill… gag

SIPA, like most schools at Columbia, has its own Financial Aid Office to assist our students.  However, the office responsible for posting charges on student accounts, billing, collecting payments and issuing refunds or stipends, is Student Financial Services (SFS), a centralized office serving the entire University.  At many colleges, this is known as the Bursar’s Office.  SIPA’s Financial Aid Office does not send you your tuition bills, collect payments, or the other procedures mentioned above.

The SFS website can be found at http://sfs.columbia.edu/.

Some important information related to your bill and your student account:

  • SFS will send an email to your Columbia email address (your UNI) on or about August 12 with a link to a preliminary bill, which must be paid in full by September 13.
  • Accounts not paid in full by the due date are subject to late fees, which are assessed monthly.
  • Interest-free monthly payment plans are available.
  • Financial aid that has been fully processed is credited to your account.  Please respond to all requests for documentation from the Financial Aid Office promptly, as failure to do so will prevent your aid from being credited to your account.
  • The state of New York requires all full-time students to have health insurance.  Your bill will include a charge for health insurance, which can be waived if you have equivalent coverage.  From the link above, click on “Health Insurance Waiver.”
  • If your aid in any semester exceeds your tuition and fees, you will receive a refund of that credit balance approximately one to two weeks into the semester.  Please plan your non-tuition expenses (rent, food, transportation, etc) accordingly.  If your aid package includes a stipend, the timing is similar to that of credit balance refunds.
  • You can receive refunds or stipend payments for which you qualify by direct deposit (recommended, otherwise you’ll receive them by a hard copy check through the mail); go to Student Services Online (SSOL) at https://ssol.columbia.edu/ to set this up.  This is currently only available to US citizens and permanent residents, but should be available for international students by the middle of the fall 2013 semester.
  • SFS accepts electronic checks for payment via SSOL, but does not accept credit cards.
  • If your bill is being paid by a sponsor or third party, please see http://sfs.columbia.edu/billing/sponsored-students for important instructions.

See SFS’s website for mailing addresses if you are paying by mail.

 

Five Students Receive Education Pioneers Fellowships

The organization works to improve education leadership and management outside the classroom.

Congratulations to the five students at Columbia SIPA who were chosen to receive Education Pioneers Graduate School Fellowships in support of their work this summer. They’re part of a group of more than 400 fellows chosen by the nonprofit organization, which works to improve education leadership and management at the school, district, and system level.

This year’s recipients are:

* Sarah Begeman, MPA ’14, New York City Department of Education

* Flavia Bento de Faria, MIA ’14, iReform, Inc.

* Jesse Corradi, MIA ’14, Building Hope

* Nick Cox, MPA ’14, New York City Department of Education

* Leah Verghese, MPA ’14, Bridgeport [Connecticut] Mayor’s Office

 

The Bridgeport public school system, which serves around 20,000 children, produces abysmal outcomes in terms of academic achievement and retention rates. As a fellow, I work with the director of education and youth policy in the mayor’s office at Bridgeport, assisting the director with policy research and analysis, communication, and day-to-day operational work in the district. I hope to be able to combine the analytical and research tools I have learned in graduate school with my first-hand knowledge of education policy and school systems to help improve student achievement in Bridgeport. 

— Leah Verghese

The fellowship, through working at the NYC Department of Education, helped me develop a more nuanced understanding of U.S. education reform.

— Nick Cox

 

 

"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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