Tuition to Rise by 2.9% Next Year
Increase Smallest Since '73
Georgetown’s tuition will increase by 2.9 percent for the 2009-2010 school year, the university announced yesterday, while need-based financial aid may increase by as much as 18 percent.
The Georgetown University Board of Directors recently approved the increase in undergraduate tuition, which will bring the cost of a Georgetown education up from $37,536 to $38,616 beginning next fall, according to a university press release. The cost of room and board will also increase by 2.9 percent, making the average total cost of living and learning on the Hilltop next year $51,543.
“A tuition increase was necessary in order to continue to fund operating costs to support faculty, maintain facilities and enhance our academic programs,” university spokesperson Julie Bataille said in an e-mail.
Bataille said this is Georgetown’s smallest percentile tuition increase since 1973. This percentile tuition increase is just more than half of that from the previous year. Last year, the board voted to raise tuition 5.5 percent between the 2007-2008 and 2008-2009 school years.
In the press release, University Provost James O’Donnell said that increasing tuition is necessary even in the midst of the economic recession.
“We are working hard to be mindful of economic impacts facing current and prospective students. We are balancing the need to limit tuition growth during these uncertain financial times with the need to continue to support top-notch faculty and provide exceptional academic programs and services,” he said.
While Georgetown is raising tuition for students, faculty salaries will not likely be affected in the recession, Bataille said.
“At this time we are not anticipating layoffs or salary freezes for faculty and staff but final compensation rates have not yet been finalized for next year,” she said.
In response to Georgetown’s increased cost of attendance and the spiraling economy, financial aid will likely also increase for next year, according to the release. Based on the current budget for next year, financial aid could receive $88 million for 2009-2010, an 18 percent increase from this year.
“Georgetown has doubled its expenditures on undergraduate scholarship aid over the past decade, increasing scholarship spending at more than twice the rate of tuition growth,” the release states.
Currently 55 percent of Georgetown students receive some sort of financial assistance. This year the university provided approximately 2,700 students with need-based scholarships. Georgetown releases funds to students expressing need, which is re-evaluated annually and expects students and their families to contribute as much financially to their education as possible.
According to the Office of Student Financial Services’ Web site, “So that limited funds can be shared most equitably, Georgetown University expects that each student and his or her family will contribute to the fullest extent possible to meet educational expenses, drawing on income and all family net assets (including home equity).”
Tuition is rising across the university – and at noticeably higher rates.
Summer school tuition will increase by 5.5 percent per credit, the release states.
Additional tuition increases for full-time students include a 4.5 percent tuition increase for the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, a 4.9 percent increase in tuition for the Masters of Business Administration program, a 4.5 percent tuition increase for the Department of Nursing graduate program, and a 4 percent increase in tuition for graduate students at the Georgetown University Law Center.


Feb 27 2009 at 1:55 p.m.
Good job re-printing a press release as your lead story...
Feb 27 2009 at 2:25 p.m.
Georgetown still won't ever show you their budget. Supposedly the GUSA Prez is the only student with access to it, but they won't share the info.
I wonder if they ever got their money back from that admin who bounced and took off to Brazil with $300K? (http://thehoya.com/node/5323)
>Or, if anyone is willing to discuss the large sum of money that disappeared from the Public Safety budget a few years back? The secrecy is only working against them.
Feb 27 2009 at 9:01 p.m.
To "wow Hoya"
Is it not news that the university is raising tuition by the smallest amount in 36 years? Does a press release automatically make something not newsworthy? Come on. It's easy to bash the hoya -- there's plenty there to criticize-- but it's usually done by half-wits like you who demonstrate that they have ZERO idea what they're talking about. It's news, even if the university puts out a release, and the hoya has a duty to report it. An issue of this paper that leads with a rewritten university press release that buries the news is still better than a contrived Voice "feature" on the university of DC tuition non-story and other tripe that lards up the emo alt-weekly.
Feb 27 2009 at 10:03 p.m.
Now now..
How dare we question Jack DeGioia's $40,000 trips to Davos to have a 7 course meal while discussing world hunger?
Feb 27 2009 at 10:08 p.m.
Let's not forget Yossi Shain taking $30,000 for "research trips" to his other house in Tel Aviv...
Feb 27 2009 at 10:14 p.m.
jourdane, the problem is the hoya does little if any of its own reporting. it just rips it from other sources.
Feb 27 2009 at 10:20 p.m.
They are just following the lead of every other lapdog newspaper out there!
NY Time and WaPO shill the gov line and The Hoya shills GU's line!
They are gonna make fine journalists! ;-)
Feb 27 2009 at 11:22 p.m.
Jon: The tuition is absolutely news. It's the one issue that impacts all students - and that's why the Hoya needs to do its own independent reporting on the issue rather than just regurgitating a press release. They should have tried to talk to sources, ask why there was an increase at all, etc.
Mar 02 2009 at 7:49 a.m.
to jourdane: before you say that the UDC tuition increase is a non-story, try dealing with an almost 100% tuition increase. did you even read the story?
but more to the point - no one is saying the Gtown tuition increase is not newsworthy. but the Hoya should be doing their own reporting; not just ripping from other sources.