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MEDIA CONTACT:
Alan K. Cubbage at 847-491-4886 or at a-cubbage@northwestern.edu
February 24, 2004
Northwestern Sets 2004-05 Costs
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Undergraduate tuition at Northwestern University
will increase 5.4 percent to $29,940 for the 2004-2005 academic year
from the current year’s $28,404, University officials announced
today.
The tuition increase will help fund increases in the University’s general
operating expenses, including salary and health care benefits for Northwestern
faculty and staff, the addition of new faculty members and anticipated rising
energy costs in the coming year.
Northwestern will continue its long-standing policy and increase the total amount
of grant funds for undergraduates by the same percentage as the tuition increase
for the coming year. Northwestern provides approximately $60 million annually
in financial aid to undergraduates. More than 40 percent of Northwestern's undergraduates
receive grants and scholarships from the University, and nearly 60 percent receive
some form of assistance, including grants, external scholarships, loans or work-study
funds.
Northwestern also will continue its policy of "need-blind" admissions,
in which a student's ability to pay is not considered during the admissions process.
The Board of Trustees approved an increase of 4.75 percent to $9,233 from $8,814
in room and board rates for an undergraduate student living in a double room
and on the standard 16-meal-per-week board plan. Approximately 4,250 of Northwestern’s
7,700 undergraduate students live in University residence halls.
At the request of Northwestern’s student government and the University’s
administration, the Board of Trustees also approved a new athletic events fee
of $25 for undergraduate students. As a result, full-time undergraduate students
will be admitted without charge to all of Northwestern’s home athletic
events, including football and basketball games. The student government requested
the system of an annual fee for all undergraduates with no admissions charge
for individual games as a way of encouraging undergraduate students to attend
Northwestern athletic events.
A separate athletic events fee is common at universities that have a Division
I athletics program, as Northwestern does.
The undergraduate student activity fee of $120 will not increase next year.
Total undergraduate costs, including tuition, activity fee, athletic event fee
and room and board will be $39,318 for 2004-2005, compared to $37,338 for the
current academic year, a 5.3 percent increase.
Northwestern's total costs are lower than average for major private research
universities. Among a group of 16 similar institutions that includes Ivy League
universities, Chicago, Duke, Stanford, Washington University in St. Louis and
others, Northwestern's total costs for the current year rank 13th out of the
16 institutions and are $357 less than the mean total costs of those institutions.
The Board of Trustees also approved tuition rates for most of its graduate and
professional programs. Graduate school tuition will increase by 5.4 percent to
$29,940 next year; law school tuition will increase 5.9 percent to $35,896; and
tuition at the Feinberg School of Medicine will increase 4 percent to $38,528.
Tuition for the Kellogg School of Management will be finalized later this year.
Founded in 1851, Northwestern University is one of the country’s leading
private research and teaching universities with an enrollment of approximately
7,700 full-time undergraduate students and approximately 17,000 total undergraduate,
graduate and professional students on campuses in Evanston and Chicago.
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