Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 30
Education Department Cuts Aid for Thousands of Low-Wage College Programs
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 30

Education Department Cuts Aid for Thousands of Low-Wage College Programs

3 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 30

Summary

  • Monday’s finalized rule could strip federal financial aid from thousands of college programs over the next few years, especially in low-wage fields such as religion, cosmetology and the arts.
  • Under the new standard, undergraduate programs must show graduates earn more than people in their state with only a high school diploma to remain aid-eligible.
  • Graduate programs face a parallel test: their alumni must out-earn workers with bachelor’s degrees in similar fields.
  • The policy marks a broader shift toward tying federal student aid eligibility to graduates’ earnings rather than program enrollment alone.

Insights

With new rules tying aid to income, how will essential low-paying fields like social work attract future students?
Will these accountability rules create a two-tiered system, reserving arts and humanities degrees only for the wealthy?
As Grad PLUS loans end and new caps begin, how will students afford expensive but critical degrees like medicine?