Foreword to Study of Student Loans and Their Relation lo
Higher Educational Finance
r EAR ago, in December, 1924, I agreed to finance an independent
investigation, and study of established Student aid methods, under
the auspices of the Association of University and College Busi
ness Officers of the Eastern States. I did so because, from the three-
year experience of the Harmon Foundation in this field, we feit that
existing methods of handling eight or ten million dollars of public moneys
in trust funds for Student aid loans, scholarships, etc., each year by the
Colleges were often based on doubtful premises, conducted with a poor
technique, were seriously wasteful and in a very large number of cases
engendered harmful influences on the character of the recipients.
Mr. Chassee started with only the most meager outline of data
embracing the scope of the work to guide him, and obviously without any
attempt to influence his judgment. His mental attitude was so judicial
that for three or four months it was impossible to determine the trend
of his mind in the many Conferences he had with the members of our
staff, and only as the various chapters or sections of the final report were
submitted did we realize the extraordinary character of the conclusions.
The reception of “A Study of Student Loans and Their Relation
to Higher Educational Finance” by the Association of University and
College Business Officers of the Eastern States at its annual Conference
was also a source of great and unexpected satisfaction. A copy of the
report was sent in typewritten form to each member in advance of the
meeting and the endorsement of Mr. Chassee’s position was cordial if
not even enthusiastic.
The objectives of the Harmon Foundation have been two-fold—
Service and Education. The Service could be handled with independence
and in accordance with our convictions because we were using our own
money. It was necessary, however, to limit our educational program to an
exhibit of the results of our experience and an expression of our opinion
when asked for by educators, which happily, has been of almost constant
occurrence.
With the “Study of Student Loans and Their Relation to Higher
Educational Finance” available, prepared by a man with scholastic, scien
tific, and business training—endorsed as a whole and rejected in no
particular part by the Association of University and College Business
Officers of the Eastern States—we feel that culpable or careless methods
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