We’ve been waiting with bated breath to see if the U.S. Department of Education would surprise us when they released the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) and proposed regulations related to the most recent negotiated rulemaking.
What follows is our analysis of the NPRM and some thoughts on how to make your voice heard. Please note that time is of the essence. You only have a 30-day window in which to make your voice heard on these regulations that will have a massive impact on distance education and digital learning.
What the Department did and didn’t release and why the Department cares about distance education
Readers may remember the most recent negotiated rulemaking that was concluded earlier this spring focused on several items, including:
state authorization reciprocity,
attendance taking for distance education courses,
distance education data reporting requirements,
disallowing federal financial aid for asynchronous clock hour programs,
accreditation,
cash management,
return to Title IV, and
TRIO programs for undocumented students. (The latter being the only area where negotiators reached consensus.)
Earlier this week, the Department released the distance education-related regulations and return to Title IV regulations for public comment. In a blog post published on July 17th, the Department indicated that it would publish proposed regulations related to cash management, reciprocity, and accreditation “by next year” as it is “tak[ing] additional time to carefully consider these important, complicated issues, and refine solutions that address important challenges for students while balancing the need for quality oversight and improved student protections with the burden on institutions and changes impacting college accrediting agencies.”
Rulemaking Reminder
A quick reminder of the rulemaking process. Because negotiators did not reach consensus in all but one area of the negotiated rulemaking, the Department is able to propose its own language for the rules through its NPRM. The publication of the NPRM in the Federal Register in the next few days starts the clock ticking on 30 days for the public to comment. At the end of that 30-day period, the Department will review all public comments, make any changes to the proposed language that it feels is warranted, and then will publish the final rules. If those final rules are published by November 1, 2024, then they will go into effect on July 1, 2025. If they are published after November 1st, they will go into effect July 1, 2026.
Why Did They Propose These Regulations?
You may be wondering what the Department’s rationale for these proposed regulations is. We repeatedly heard during negotiations that the Department has a responsibility to protect students and ensure that the sizeable federal investment in higher education through Title IV federal financial aid is protected. In that July 17th blog post, Under Secretary James Kvaal, writing for the Department, reiterated that these proposed rules would “further protect students and taxpayers” and “update and improve outdated processes, consolidate rules, and establish more consumer-friendly policies for students to access the aid to which they are entitled.”
Attendance Taking for Distance Education Courses
What the Department is proposing
Under current regulations, an institution must follow a complex set of rules to determine the amount (if any) of disbursed federal aid should be refunded to the Department of Education if a student withdraws from a course or the institution. If a student withdraws without official notice from a distance education course(s), the institution must determine the “last day of attendance” for that student. The Department of Education defines the “last day of attendance” as the last time the student participated in one of the activities associated with “active engagement” in a course. This might include taking a test, submitting a paper, or participating in an online discussion about the course content. Logging into the learning management system without any other activity does not count.
Citing some amorphous instances of institutions not adequately documenting the student’s last day of attendance, the Department proposed the following to “simplify” and improve the accuracy of determining the student’s last day of course activity:
Require that attendance be taken in all distance education courses. While they use the word “attendance,” the Department appears to mean documenting the last instance of academic engagement for EACH student with the exception of dissertation research courses.
Within 14 days of a student’s last date of attendance, the institution must effectively withdraw a student and document that withdrawal date.
Our analysis and concerns
We are dubious that the proposed regulations would “simplify” compliance for institutions. As we reported back in March, we talked with individuals from several institutions and NASFAA (the financial aid organization) and heard that with the exception offully-online institutions or those institutions that are already taking attendance, the proposed regulations would not simplify things at all. In fact, they thought it would greatly increase the work involved for such actions with the addition of necessary policy creation, faculty development, software changes, and the faculty and administrative time to take attendance on each and every student for each and every course.
We also have grave concerns regarding the 14-day requirement. We are concerned that this proposed language will inadvertently negatively impact adult learners. Many of the individuals we spoke with reminded us that with adult learners, it is not uncommon for them to not engage in coursework for a period of time but still complete the course successfully. Additionally, this 14-day requirement will create more burden for faculty to understand, administer, collect, and archive formal leave of absence notices for students who will be gone for more than 14 days. Examples of such leaves include students on temporary military duty or those experiencing health issues. Finally, there are academic implications. To improve student learning and address academic integrity requirements, some faculty have employed authentic assessment techniques that engage students in research or studies in the community or their chosen profession. Sometimes, these assignments take more than 14 days of research or fieldwork. Meanwhile, the instructor is available for questions, but the possible lapse in academic engagement will need to be documented.
Disallowing financial aid for asynchronous clock-hour courses and programs
What the Department is proposing
Although most financial aid is disbursed to students through the credit hour, some programs use clock hours as the basis for financial aid disbursement. This type of disbursement is most prevalent in practical programs like welding or cosmetology. In clock-hour programs, aid is literally determined by the number of student participation minutes associated with the program.
During the recent negotiated rulemaking, the Department expressed concern that institutions offering asynchronous clock hour programs were not adequately tracking the amount of time students spent in their asynchronous courses. One negotiator went so far as to accuse asynchronous clock-hour programs of being nothing more than students watching a bunch of YouTube videos. For “evidence” the Department cites a New America analysis of a survey conducted by another organization. Unfortunately, the survey was about student satisfaction with COVID-era remote learning, and there appears to be no mention of whether the instruction was asynchronous or synchronous, as often happened during COVID. As a result, the Department is proposing to “disallow enrollment in asynchronous distance education courses for programs that use the clock-hour method of financial aid disbursement.” It is important to note that this only applies to clock-hour courses and does not impact credit-hour courses.
Our analysis and concerns
Although the Department cited problems with institutions accurately tracking the time students participate in asynchronous clock-hour courses, it was unable to provide specific institutional examples or the scope of the problem. They said that they witnessed some institutions that spent lots of time and money getting it right. We understand the Department’s concern, but we worry about those institutions being punished for the non-compliance of others. We are also very afraid that this prohibition will hurt the students in these programs, many of whom have the greatest need for financial aid. During the negotiated rulemaking public comment period, we heard many current and former students speak about how they would be unable to participate in face-to-face clock-hour programs and would be forced to withdraw from their asynchronous programs should the Department pull financial aid for those programs. For a Department that expresses a desire to help those students most in need, this decision to eradicate financial aid for asynchronous clock-hour courses and programs seems likely to hurt the very students the Department purports to help.
Creating a “virtual location”
What the Department is proposing
Institutions currently report students as participating in one of three physical locations: a) the main campus, b) a branch campus, or c) an additional location (which the Department defines as a “physical facility that is geographically separate from the main campus of the institution…at which the institution offers at least 50 percent of an educational program.”
In addition to the existing three location categories, a fourth, “virtual location,” would be added for “which the institution offers 100 percent of an educational program through distance education or correspondence courses, notwithstanding requirements for students to complete on-campus or residential periods of 90 days or less.” The institution would assign the student to one of these four locations.
This Department claims this new classification will be beneficial as it will help it:
“…measure and better understand student outcomes and the amount of Title IV fund program funds being expended in each setting”,
“…conduct more accurate program oversight including through better tailored program reviews”,
“…improve the Department’s ability to determine the States where title IV, HEA recipients are located”,
Qualify students for “closed school discharges” if the institution ceases its online offerings but does not completely close.
Our analysis and concerns
There are some definite benefits, but we are not sure we have been given the full details of exactly how this will work, so we have some reservations. As to the benefits listed above:
We support student outcomes research but have questions.
We are in favor of better institutional program reviews.
We do not recall the Department citing the need for student location data during the negotiations until they realized they did not have it in analyzing a proposal regarding state authorization reciprocity. They used SARA data, which works fine for everyone except California.
The ability for students to receive benefits if an institution shutters its online operations is a worthy benefit. Most institutions making the change have moved completely online, but it is possible that an institution could return to fully on-campus instruction.
The Department is expected to analyze the costs for compliance for each of its recommendations. Unfortunately, there is no separate analysis of implementing a virtual location. We are not sure if this is an oversight or if they considered it part of their analysis for collecting data, as outlined in the next section of this post. There will be a great need for work and coordination between the institutional registrar, provost, financial aid, and distance education leadership to make policies and implement the required technical changes. There will be a cost. We have more significant questions about the data collection proposed.
Collecting more data on distance education courses and programs
What the Department is proposing
As noted with the creation of the Virtual Location proposed above, the Department is keen on collecting additional data on distance education. In the Virtual Location discussion, they cited the purposes of “program oversight, audits, looking at outcome metrics, and College Scorecard program-level data, including debt, earnings, and completion.”
A few negotiators also proposed that for each student receiving Title IV financial aid, “the institution must submit to the Secretary, in accordance with procedures established by the Secretary, a report regarding the recipient’s enrollment in distance education or correspondence courses.” The Department goes on to write (p. 41) that “the proposed addition of a definition for distance education course would enable the Department to better assess the effectiveness of distance education and compare its outcomes with those of traditional in-person instruction.”
This is a significant increase in institutional data reporting. The Department will provide the details later (“we would explain the details of this reporting in guidance pertaining to the operation of the Department’s systems”) along with an opportunity for institutions to provide feedback on the proposed data collection elements.
To give time for that process and institutional implementation, the effective date is delayed to July 1, 2026, so institutions will have sufficient time to make the necessary changes.
Our analysis and concerns
As we wrote back in March, we are still trying to figure out the long-term implications. While we have long advocated for more data about distance education, we are heartened that the Department recognizes that this will take effort and time for both the FSA staff and the institutions. The delay and opportunity for feedback are welcomed.
We do have significant concerns:
The original proposal by negotiators was for simple student-level data on enrollment modalities. This has morphed far beyond what was discussed to include: program oversight audits, outcome metrics, College Scorecard program-level data, debt earnings, completion rates, the amount of Title IV funds expended on distance education programs, and the State in which the distant student is located while enrolled. During rulemaking, the Department never provided such an extensive list for negotiators to give their reactions. We can see where collecting some of this information might make sense, but others make us worry about the possibility of seeking reasons to defund distance education programs.
Even with the delay, we are concerned about the Department’s ability to manage this process internally and in giving proper direction to institutions and their financial aid software providers.
Importantly, we have sincere concerns about how the Department might use such data. We hope clear research questions are elucidated when they propose the data elements. Meanwhile, we are all aware of “research” that pins differences in student success on modality while overlooking differences in the population served. And in the long list of items the Department suggests, the necessary demographics are missing. We are worried that the Department might erroneously make a correlation equals causation argument regarding student success in distance education. As if to validate our concerns, in this NPRM the Department cites research of COVID courses, which is not generalizable to all distance education. There is so much wrong with this approach. Watch for more from us on this issue.
The Department punted on any cost analysis, but it will likely be significant. When the Department cites its cost calculations for the package, it would be nice if it acknowledged the huge missing asterisk of the cost information that is not collected for this data proposal.
Finally, the proposal falls short of its own goals. If they want to make the comparisons between distance and on-campus students that they are touting, then they need information on ALL students.
How you can get involved…and you must
It’s critical that we respond as a community to help the department understand how these regulations will impact students and institutions. How can you get involved? Comment! Institutional personnel, program personnel, or individuals may comment during the 30-day public comment period.
How to comment
If you wish to comment as an institution or program, you should work with your institution’s government relations office. But you don’t have to comment as an official representative of your institution; you can comment as a private citizen.
Each NPRM announcement provides directions on how to comment in the Summary section of each notice. You are directed to submit comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal at regulations.gov.At regulations.gov under FAQ, you will find the instructions for finding a rule on the site and submitting comments. Please note that the Department will not accept comments by fax, email, or submission after the comment period ends. You are advised to include the Docket ID (that will come in the Federal Register version, and we will update this post when it is published) at the top of the comments and submit your comments or attachments in Microsoft Word format.
Who can comment
Comments can come from institutions/organizations or individuals. Official comments from an institution or organization are important, but be sure that you have the approval of the President or whomever has authority. We do not want you to lose your job. You can also comment as an individual. You can state your place of employment and expertise but be clear that it is your own opinion.
What should you say
Here is your opportunity to ask clarifying questions, show support for the language, express challenges that could have unintentional consequences on students or your institution, suggest alternatives (they like that), or raise other concerns.
We suggest that, if possible, you explain the impact of the proposed regulations on students and your institution and, wherever possible, provide helpful suggestions that improve the proposed regulations.
More than we have seen in previous NPRM announcements, the Department provided a series of tips to consider when preparing your public comment. Suggestions include:
being concise,
referring to specific sections and subsections in order to organize your submission,
and, where possible, support your argument with data-driven evidence.
Finally, we often share that volume matters for letters to the Department. However, we want to be clear that the number of comments is important, but the comments should provide substance that is useful for the Department. The Department noted that a well-supported comment is more informative than many form letters.
Next steps
As previously shared, the comment period will end 30 days after the official release of the NPRM, approximately August 21st (we will update this post with the official date once it is released in the Federal Register). The Department must review and respond to the submitted comments. The announcement of the final regulations will include the Department’s response to the comments in the preamble of the Federal Register announcement. Final regulations that are released by November 1, 2024, will be effective July 1, 2025.
Cheryl joined WCET in August of 2015 as the director of the State Authorization Network. She currently serves as the senior director, policy innovations. She directs the overall activities of WCET’s State Authorization Network (SAN), including coordination of staff addressing interstate policy and compliance, along with other ancillary compliance issues. As senior director, Cheryl also serves the overall WCET membership in addressing emerging and special regulatory issues related to digital learning in postsecondary education. She brings extensive experience in education and compliance to the WCET team and is a contributing author for State Authorization of Colleges and Universities, a guidebook for understanding the legal basis for State and Federal compliance for activities of postsecondary institutions.
Cheryl holds a Juris Doctorate from the University of Richmond, a master’s degree in criminal justice from Bowling Green State University, and a bachelor’s degree in political science from James Madison University. She is the mother of four kids, all of whom have been instrumental in helping her develop new interests in theatre, hockey, and figure skating. Outside of work, Cheryl enjoys spending time with her family and is an avid fan of movies and TV shows written by Aaron Sorkin.
Van joined WCET in 2021 as chief strategy officer where he is responsible for all aspects of WCET’s strategic planning; artificial intelligence research; diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts; and assisting the team with policy and research efforts.
Van is a valuable asset to the team, having over 25 years of experience in higher education as a faculty member, academic administrator, state policy maker, and edtech leader. Van holds a PhD in 20th century US history with an emphasis in civil rights from Vanderbilt University, and his commitment to education is evidenced in both his professional and personal successes. Additionally, Van led the creation of the Texas adult degree complete project and the development of the first competency-based bachelor’s degrees at Texas public institutions of higher education during his time on the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.
Van lives outside of Austin, Texas, with his beloved wife Lisa and two cats and, when not working, spends time collecting Lego models and dreaming of the day he can complete his western US camping trip. Van’s favorite book is To Kill a Mockingbird, and his favorite movie is Dr. Strangelove.
Russ Poulin is the executive director for WCET. He directs the team’s work in supporting the efforts of postsecondary institutions from all 50 states with a focus on the policy and practice of digital learning. He is a highly sought-after expert and leader regarding policy issues for distance education and on-campus uses of educational technologies. As WICHE vice president for technology-enhanced education, he advises on policy and projects for the regional higher education compact. Russ’s commitment to the field is continually noted, and he was honored to have represented the distance education community on federal negotiated rulemaking committees and subcommittees. Russ has received recognition from the Online Learning Consortium (OLC), the Presidents’ Forum, Excelsior College, and the National University Technology Network (NUTN) for his contributions to postsecondary digital education and educational policy.
Russ received his bachelor’s degree from the University of Colorado Denver and holds a master’s degree from the University of Northern Colorado. For no discernible reason, Russ also writes movie reviews for WCET members. As a movie enthusiast, Russ is most fascinated with characters and plots that surprise him. In addition, Russ is a recovering trivia guy who is also partial to cats and to his wife, Laurie.
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