΄σΟσ΄«Γ½

΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ to Hold Tuition Rates Steady for Second Year in a Row

The ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ Board of Trustees has voted once again to freeze tuition for undergraduate students in 2019–20, bucking a nationwide trend of rising college costs for both public and private institutions.

This is the second year that ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ has placed a cap on tuition for both residential and online undergraduate students.

β€œWe put our students first,” said President Pamela R. Fox, β€œWe recognize that increased tuition costs can create a hardship for our students and their families, and we want to do what we can to alleviate that burden. I am proud that our Trustees have taken the lead and recognized the need for support for the second year in a row.”

According to the State Council of Higher Education in Virginia, tuition rates this year rose at an average of 5.9 percent at Virginia’s four-year colleges and universities.

΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ provides financial aid to nearly every one of its students. Last year Fox also reinstated an additional line of tuition support for high-achieving sophomores and juniors with unmet financial need. In addition, the Commonwealth of Virginia provides $3,400 for undergraduate students that attend private universities through the Tuition Assistance Grant.

With ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½β€™s undergraduate tuition at $30,690, and the average aid package providing about $22,000, Mary Baldwin’s cost remains competitive with Virginia’s public colleges and universities.

For the second year in a row, a record number of students are applying to and making their tuition deposits at ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½. This past fall, ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ enrolled its largest first-year class of residential students, and so far, the university is on track to surpass that number.

The 2019–20 tuition freeze applies to all ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½ students with the exception of modest increases for graduate students in the physical therapy, occupational therapy, and physician assistant programs.