The University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB), is a public, four-year school
serving 5,477 undergraduate and graduate students, although most of its students
are seeking graduate or professional degrees. The campus' academic programs
include schools of dentistry, law, medicine, nursing, pharmacy and social work
and graduate school. Because a large number of UMB students already have
undergraduate degrees, many juggle jobs — and families — with class work. Many
of the graduate and professional students leave school with large debt loads,
and some arrive at UMB with existing credit problems. Additionally, each school
on campus operates as a separate entity, sometimes making it a challenge for
Carolyn Pritchett, debt-management counselor, to develop relationships with
students in each academic unit.
Programs
To meet that challenge, UMB takes a personalized
approach to debt management. Pritchett meets regularly with students in groups
and individually to discuss financial-aid topics that pertain specifically to
students’ field of study. Working in tandem with officials of the campus'
academic units, Pritchett communicates with students throughout their careers at
the school — and she employs some special tricks to engage students' interest in
sound financial management.
Each year, Pritchett addresses a new group of about 1,800 students, starting
with debt-management training during orientation. The sessions complement a
required entrance-counseling tutorial offered through the university's Web site.
For the orientation session, she wears a T-shirt, jeans, hard hat and tool belt
complete with real tools to show that she's "here to bring you tools to work
with." She focuses on education-loan interest rates, thrifty living, keeping
good records, establishing good credit and helpful Web sites. Handing out candy
to the students, she makes it clear that she's there to "take care of them"
during their careers at UMB and when they repay their education loans.
Debt-management presentations continue through mid-year, with sessions geared
to the specific needs of the campus' academic units.
Like its orientation debt-management sessions, UMB's education-loan exit
counseling is designed with impact in mind. During exit-counseling
presentations, students see Pritchett in costume again — this time dressed as a
devil. Wearing horns and a tail, and with "Defaulted" written on her forehead,
she makes the point that student-loan default has serious consequences and that
she is available to help them avoid it.
During exit counseling, Pritchett provides each of the approximately 1,800
graduating students with a folder that contains their individual student-loan
histories and a variety of USA Funds® brochures whose topics range
from deferments and forbearances, to loan consolidation, to higher-education tax
benefits. Students also receive loan-payment charts and a glossary of pertinent
terms, and she stresses the importance of students' providing their lenders with
up-to-date contact information.
Results
UMB places special emphasis on debt management to
assist its students with the heavy education-loan debt that is typical for
graduate and professional students. Pritchett's unrelenting attention to
students helps them make responsible decisions about borrowing and repayment. As
a result, the university maintains a cohort default rate of less than 1 percent.
Her work has an impact that reaches beyond the UMB-campus community to include
students’ entire families: Pritchett's thorough message has prompted some
students to bring members of their families to her so they can benefit from her
lessons about debt management.