Schools

Temple Gives $39.2M In Pandemic Relief To Select Students

Numerous students who were financially impacted by the pandemic are expected to get grants via the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund.

PHILADELPHIA — A large portion Temple University students who were financially impacted by the coronavirus pandemic are getting a cut of $39.2 million through the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund.

According to Temple, about 10,500 students who said they were financially impacted by the coronavirus pandemic are expected to get grant funds.

Later this month, Temple will disburse an additional $11 to $12 million of the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund (HEERF III) funding to about those students who are enrolled for the fall semester. The students, who have all demonstrated financial need and are pursuing undergraduate, graduate or professional degrees, will receive a HEERF III grant amount of $1,000 each.

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A recent study showed 82 percent of students got received relief assistance noted that the aid improved their personal well-being. Sixty-nine percent of those same respondents said the aid increased their chances of graduating.

As part of HEERF III, Temple has been allocated $39,204,052 to use toward grants for students who have demonstrated financial need and have been affected by COVID-19.

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HEERF III was included in the American Rescue Plan, the third federal COVID-19 stimulus bill signed into law to include funding for higher education institutions and students using HEERF, which was established in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act back in 2020.

About $26.5 million of the funding was disbursed as $3,500 grants to all Federal Pell Grant-eligible undergraduate students registered at Temple this fall.

About 7,600 students from Temple’s undergraduate population have received a Pell Grant. This includes 1,368 first-year students — 28 percent of Temple’s Class of 2025 — as recipients of a Pell Grant, which is awarded to undergraduate students who display exceptional financial need and have not earned a bachelor’s, graduate or professional degree.

"This pandemic has impacted students beyond their struggle to afford tuition," Shawn Abbott, vice provost for admissions, financial aid and enrollment management, said. "We’ve learned that students lost jobs and we’ve learned that students have struggled mightily affording even their most basic needs—from internet service to gas money. This federal relief was extraordinary and we are grateful to pass it on swiftly to our students in the greatest need."

To distribute these grants, the university contacted eligible students via email and asked them to fill out a survey that details how they have been affected by the pandemic. Recipients are then given the option to have the grant applied directly to their student account balance or distributed directly to them as a refund via direct deposit.

Earlier this summer, Temple also disbursed roughly $280,000 of its HEERF III funding in the form of $1,000 to $3,000 grants to 142 students who had demonstrated great financial need and also had prior balances. The university has also disbursed nearly $1.1 million of the funding in the form of grants up to $5,000 to 227 students.

The nearly $40 million disbursed in the third round of HEERF follows two earlier instances in which Temple distributed COVID-19 relief assistance. This past spring, as part of HEERF II, $14.7 million was disbursed to 16,201 students who were enrolled for the spring 2021 semester. In 2020, during HEERF I, the university distributed more than $14.7 million directly to students.

"This is now our third round of grant funding, and it’s enabling us to help more students with a little relief than we ever imagined," Abbott said. "With HEERF III, we have been able to help the largest number of our students yet which is truly extraordinary.”"

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