Board raises total costs and expands financial aid for undergraduate
students
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- Entering first-year and transfer students' costs raised 26.9
percent; returning students will pay 5 percent more
- Additional revenue to fund strategic initiatives to directly
benefit students
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The University of Richmond's board of trustees voted
Friday to set the 2005-06 total cost of attendance for entering
first-year and transfer undergraduate students at $40,510, an
increase of 26.9 percent from the current academic year, and
for returning undergraduate students at $33,510, an increase
of 5 percent. Total cost of attendance includes tuition, fees,
room and board. Recognizing that currently enrolled students
and their families had already budgeted for their college
expenses based on the existing tuition rate, the board decided
to exempt them from the larger increase.
In a sweeping move to help ensure that a Richmond education
remains affordable, the board also voted to significantly
expand its financial aid programs for undergraduate students.
The University will use a sizeable portion of the increased tuition
revenue to continue its policy of meeting 100 percent of a
student's demonstrated financial need, which began in 2002.
This policy places a $4,000 cap on loan and work-study funding
per year with the balance of demonstrated need met with
need-based grants that do not have to be repaid.
Richmond is the only university in the Commonwealth of
Virginia, and one of fewer than 40 universities in the country,
to meet 100 percent of undergraduate students' demonstrated
need and offer a "need-blind" admission policy. Applying or
qualifying for need-based aid is not a factor in Richmond's
admission decisions.
A significant portion of the revenue from the increased
tuition will be dedicated to expanding need- and merit-based
scholarships for undergraduates. Approximately 65 percent of
Richmond undergraduate students currently receive some
form of financial aid.
Tuition at Richmond is the primary revenue source for
annual operations, as is the case with most private universities.
Although the University's endowment is sizeable, it accounts
for only 27 percent of the institution's total operating budget.
The additional tuition revenue will allow the University
to accelerate the process for implementing many of its strategic
initiatives that will greatly enhance the undergraduate experience
and directly benefit students.
These initiatives include increasing the amount of need- and
merit-based scholarships, hiring additional faculty in a variety of
disciplines, updating technology resources throughout the campus
and reengineering classroom spaces to better facilitate discussionbased
learning. Other initiatives include renovating or expanding
existing buildings such as the science center, library, business
school and dining hall, as well as constructing new facilities on
campus.
When the tuition increase is implemented, the total cost of
attending Richmond will be comparable to that of other selective
private universities in the nation with which Richmond competes
for top students, including Duke, Vanderbilt, Georgetown and
Colgate.
"For the past several decades, the University of Richmond's
tuition rate has been comparatively low and does not accurately
reflect the high quality of our faculty, academic programs and
campus resources," said Otis D. Coston Jr., rector of the board
of trustees. "We are in the process of building one of the
nation's great universities, and increasing tuition revenue will
provide
the resources needed to propel Richmond to the top echelon of
academic excellence.
"We have a responsibility to our students and the nation to
provide the highest quality educational experience within our
reach."
The vast majority of Richmond alumni support this position.
In a 2003 alumni survey, 95 percent of the respondents said that
it was important for the university to pursue its vision to "become
one of the finest small private universities in the nation."
"The University's generous financial aid program coupled
with the increased academic quality resulting from the additional
tuition revenue will enhance our ability to attract the best and
brightest students from Virginia and beyond to our campus,"
said Pam Spence, dean of admission. |