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College Board Settles Inquiry into Its Student Loan Practices

Published 11 December 08 04:40 PM | Student Loan Girl 

The College Board, which administers the SAT, ACT, and AP college admissions tests, has agreed to resolve an investigation by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo and Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal into its student loan practices.

As part of the settlement agreement, the College Board — which exited the student loan business last year — will allocate $675,000 to developing a set of tools, including calculators, that would help families and financial aid administrators across the country to compare student loan offers (“College Board Rapped for Student Loan Marketing,” North County Gazette, Dec. 8, 2008).

The tools will “help parents, students and educators with the college loan process” by identifying the lowest cost student loan options, said Jennifer Topiel, a spokeswoman for the College Board, in an emailed statement.

“Our investigation of the student lending industry revealed arrangements — concealed from students and families — between the College Board and financial-aid offices at several schools,” Blumenthal said in a statement December 8. “The College Board provided discounted equipment and services to the schools in exchange for a coveted spot on the schools’ preferred-lender lists.”

Cuomo characterized the College Board’s loan arrangement with colleges as deceitful, although he did say that the testing company, with “its national reach and extensive expertise in higher education,” was well-suited to help parents and students “borrow smartly” (“College Board Resolves Two State Student-Loan Probes,” Bloomberg.com, Dec. 8, 2008).

“Loans are hard enough to come by these days; the last thing we need are deceitful arrangements like this one that stand squarely in the way of students and parents getting the facts,” Cuomo said. “We should be doing absolutely everything we can to guide students to the least expensive, least complicated option for affording higher education.”

 

Code of Conduct Seeks to Protect Students

 

Should the College Board ever resume its college lending programs, it has said it will abide by the Attorney General’s Direct-to-Consumer Marketing Code of Conduct, which prohibits lenders and marketers of student loans from using deceptive marketing practices.

The code of conduct is the result of Cuomo’s investigations into the student loan industry that have uncovered widespread conflict of interest practices among colleges and student loan lenders. Colleges and financial aid officers received both payments and perks from lenders in exchange for placement on schools’ preferred lender lists.

Cuomo spokeswoman Emily Browne said that 22 lenders and 26 institutions have pledged to sever financial ties and abide by a code of conduct that prohibits accepting gifts or payments from lenders.



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