Florida students paid $45,505 to attend the two-year private for-profit institution this year – $3,635 more than the $41,870 charged for 2017-18.
Data shows 89 percent of full-time undergraduates who started school in 2015-16 received student financial aid in some form. In all, 404 students received grants or scholarships totaling $1.7 million and 449 students took out student loans totaling more than $3.3 million.
Including all undergraduates (704), 687 students used grants or scholarships totaling $3 million, and 703 students took out $5.3 million in federal student loans.
The cost of attending
Enrollment | 2015-16 | 2016-17 | 2017-18 | 2018-19 | Change in tuition and fees 2015-16 to 2018-19 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
In-state | ~598 | $38,990 | $40,060 | $41,870 | $45,505 | 16.7% |
Undergraduate financial aid
The following data includes only full-time students who began an undergraduate program at the Concorde Career Institute-Jacksonville in 2015-16.Type of Aid | Number of students receiving aid | Percent receiving aid | Total amount of aid received | Average amount of aid per student |
---|---|---|---|---|
Federal grants | 395 | 71% | $1,609,090 | $4,074 |
State / local grant or scholarship | 29 | 5% | $121,837 | $4,201 |
Institutional grants or scholarships | 14 | 3% | $9,967 | $712 |
Grant or scholarship aid total | 404 | 73% | $1,740,894 | $4,309 |
Federal student loans | 408 | 73% | $2,954,673 | $7,242 |
Other student loans | 280 | 50% | $368,508 | $1,316 |
Student loan aid | 449 | 81% | $3,323,181 | $7,401 |
Total student aid | 493 | 89% | - | - |