Grants
CMU Grants
These grants are awarded on the basis of demonstrated need, with a minimum grant of $50 and a maximum grant not to exceed the gift portion of the student’s financial aid package. An employee/dependent tuition benefit is counted in the gift portion of the student’s financial aid package. Receipt of the tuition benefit will result in the cancellation of a CMU grant.
Federal Pell Grants
Application Procedures. Students may apply for Federal Pell Grants by filing a FAFSA.
Methods of Selection of Recipients and Allocation of Awards. The Pell Grant Program is a need based program. The applicant must be enrolled as a first degree undergraduate student in an approved postsecondary institution and must show financial need as determined by Federal Methodology, a formula applied to all applicants. Pell Grant lifetime eligibility is limited to the full-time equivalence of 12 semesters.
Award Schedule. The amount of the award will be determined by the expected family contribution (EFC) and enrollment status at time of the Pell Grant disbursement.
Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants (SEOG)
These are federal grants awarded by CMU to undergraduate students who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents demonstrating financial need. The amount of the grant is determined based on the federal needs analysis and available funding. Students must be making satisfactory academic progress to continue receiving the grant, and meet all other conditions outlined in the Financial Aid Eligibility section of this Bulletin.
TEACH Grant Program
Through the College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007, Congress created the Teacher Education Assistance for College and Higher Education (TEACH) Grant Program that provides grants of up to $4,000 per year to students who intend to teach in a public or private elementary or secondary school that serves students from low-income families.
Under the budget Control Act of 2011, TEACH grant funding was reduced. TEACH grant awards where the first disbursement is made on or after October 1, 2017 must be reduced by 6.60% from the original statutory amounts.
Conditions. In exchange for receiving a TEACH Grant, you must agree to serve as a full-time teacher in a high-need field in a public or private elementary or secondary school that serves low-income students (see below for more information on high-need fields and schools serving low-income students). As a recipient of a TEACH Grant, you must teach for at least four academic years within eight calendar years of completing the program of study for which you received a TEACH Grant. IMPORTANT: If you fail to complete this service obligation, all amounts of the TEACH Grants that you received will be converted to a Federal Direct Unsubsidized Stafford Loan. You must then repay this loan to the U.S. Department of Education. You will be charged interest from the date the grant(s) was disbursed.
Student Eligibility Requirements at CMU:
High-Need Field
High-need fields are the specific subject areas identified below:
- Bilingual Education and English Language Acquisition.
- Foreign Language.
- Mathematics.
- Reading Specialist.
- Science.
- Special Education.
Other identified teacher shortage areas as of the time you begin teaching in that field. These are teacher subject shortage areas (not geographic areas) that are listed in the Department of Education’s Annual Teacher Shortage Area Nationwide Listing at https://studentaid.ed.gov/sa/types/grants-scholarships/teach#high-need-fields.
Schools Serving Low-Income Students. Schools serving low-income students include any elementary or secondary school that is listed in the Department of Education’s Annual Directory of Designated Low-Income Schools for Teacher Cancellation Benefits at https://www.tcli.ed.gov/CBSWebApp/tcli/TCLIPubSchoolSearch.jsp.
Teach Grant Agreement to Serve. Each year you receive a TEACH Grant, you must sign a TEACH Grant Agreement to Serve that will be available electronically on a Department of Education Web site. The TEACH Grant Agreement to Serve specifies the conditions under which the grant will be awarded, the teaching service requirements, and includes an acknowledgment by you that you understand that if you do not meet the teaching service requirements you must repay the grant as a Federal Direct Unsubsidized Loan, with interest accrued from the date the grant funds were disbursed. Specifically, the TEACH Grant Agreement to Serve will provide that:
- For each TEACH Grant-eligible program for which you received TEACH Grant funds, you must serve as a full-time teacher for a total of at least four academic years within eight calendar years after you completed or withdrew from the academic program for which you received the TEACH Grant.
- You must perform the teaching service as a highly-qualified teacher at a low-income school. The term highly-qualified teacher is defined in section 9101(23) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 or in section 602(10) of the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act.
- Your teaching service must be in a high-need field.
- You must comply with any other requirements that the Department of Education determines to be necessary.
If you do not complete the required teaching service obligation, TEACH Grant funds you received will be converted to a Federal Direct Unsubsidized Stafford Loan that you must repay, with interest charged from the date of each TEACH Grant disbursement.