FINANCIAL AID is Essential to Ensuring Access to Higher Ed

Receiving a financial aid package is the point where dreams start to crystallize.

All Students Need to Know Their Financial Aid Status—Show Them How

of Texas high school seniors completed the FAFSA in May 2024.

fewer Texas seniors completed the FAFSA in 2024 than in 2023.

Source: Every Texan

Explore FASFA/TAFSA Resources

Seeing Is Believing: Show Students Their Options—On Paper

Quantified assistance changes perspectives on what’s possible. Many students and families assume they can’t afford college. But when they see their financial aid packages in writing, they can begin to consider new horizons.

Once a student receives an aid letter—often showing thousands of dollars in support—they begin to think concretely about their futures. Once they know how much college actually costs, they can begin to build a plan that otherwise would not have been possible.

Source: Best Colleges


This moment can be powerful for families, too: Parents and guardians are often unaware or under-informed of financial aid opportunities and unsure whether they can afford to send their child to college. Having solid aid numbers to work with helps tip their thinking from doubt to possibility.

Build Capacity to Reach Every Student

In many respects, the full process of CCMR is difficult because there are so many routes to take to the same goal. Fortunately, supporting financial aid applications is a well-mapped area of the CCMR landscape—there is a proven process and many high-quality resources available for educators.

To meet their obligation to students, districts must build enough capacity to ensure that students feel confident applying for financial aid.

Four Keys to Success

Districts should ensure staff—from advisors to teachers, and others—are trained well enough about the TASFA/FAFSA process to advise students themselves or offer them the best resources to answer their questions.

Leveraging community partnerships with individuals or organizations that families already trust—including local organizations or businesses—and special events can help broadcast financial aid awareness and information to every student when districts lack the ability to do this alone.

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Ongoing communication that starts well before senior year can have a cumulative positive effect on completing the FAFSA and TASFA process.


Don’t predict. Prepare. Avoid the urge to sort students into college-bound or not-college-bound lanes. Everyone should have the chance to see their potential financial aid.

College Prep: Not Just for High Schoolers

Maintain Statewide Momentum

The data is clear: More FAFSA/TASFA completions = more college enrollments.

Texas’ FAFSA/TASFA completion rates show that our approach is working. Paired with Texas’ efforts to build meaningful career and education pathways and prioritize credentials of value, exceeding the national average by 10% in FAFSA completion could mean thousands more students pursuing their college dreams in a structured, meaningful way.

Now, we just have to stay the course and expand our efforts.

Texas’ May 2024 completion rate is about 8% higher than the nation’s.

Financial aid support matters not only for students, but also for the districts that benefit from CCMR Outcomes Bonus funding—incentives designed to spark further progress in postsecondary readiness. Districts that proactively support FAFSA/TASFA completion are not only ensuring students meet a state graduation requirement but more importantly, are unlocking vital financial resources and opportunities that could enable and support their postsecondary aspirations.

The bottom line: We should ensure every student has the opportunity to pursue higher education with the help of timely and accurate financial aid guidance.