Inceptia.org
Nudging Students Toward Smart
Borrowing
Using loan summaries to help borrowers
better understand their loans.
As students increasingly
rely on loans to finance part or all of their college education the need for
relevant, timely information to help make informed borrowing choices has become
more critical than ever.
Students themselves are
indicating a need for such initiatives, as demonstrated through a number of
surveys that uncover numerous confusing concepts for loan borrowers. Consider
the following:
·
48% of borrowers either don’t know or incorrectly estimate the
amount they have borrowed.1
·
28% incorrectly believe they have no federal loans at all.1
·
94% of student borrowers do not understand their loan repayment
terms.2
The ramifications for borrower
confusion can be significant. When students do not invest in or avail
themselves of existing loan counseling resources, those students, as well as schools
and society at large, suffer from the effects of over borrowing, lower degree
attainment, increased attrition, and student loan default.
A number of schools and
states, however, are using a simple yet innovative approach to help students
actively manage loan debt as they progress toward degree completion. These
institutions use loan summaries, sometimes called “debt letters,” to supplement
loan counseling practices and expand on financial education outreach—keeping
students apprised of their individual borrowing levels and allowing them to
make informed choices about future repayment scenarios.
Loan summaries/debt letters
are a simple, low-touch effort to keep student borrowers engaged in the active
management of their loans while in school. While letters can vary among
institutions, commonalities include a summary of current aggregate borrowing,
estimated monthly repayment amounts, and resources for learning more or
obtaining help. These summaries are strategically scheduled to be delivered at
times when students are making financial aid and/or course registration
decisions, thus providing a highly-effective, just-in-time intervention for
borrowers.
Inceptia’s newest research
brief, Loan Summaries: Nudging Students Toward Smart Borrowing, examines how
three different universities administered their loan summary initiatives and
the corresponding results on student behavior. The results offer support that
this simple, lost-cost practice can impact not only borrowing behaviors, but
also academic performance and enrollment persistence. Furthermore, the brief
offers best practice considerations for schools looking at implementing loan
summaries as to support student success.
The research brief and a
recorded webinar diving deeper into the brief’s findings and offering insight
and strategies on how loan summaries help borrowers better understand their
loans can be viewed at inceptia.org/smart-borrowers.
1. Akers, E. and
Chingos, M. (2014, December). Are College Students Borrowing Blindly? Brookings
Institution. Retrieved from:
https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/Are-College-Students-Borrowing-Blindly_Dec-2014.pdf
2. Rathmanner, D. (2016, January).
January 2016 Student Loan Borrower Survey. LendEDU. Retrieved from
https://lendedu.com/blog/January-student-loan-survey.
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