Emergency NumbersPhone Book (Must be on-campus or have a valid network account)
Financial Profile
Cost of Attendance and Financial Aid
Tuition and fees at CSB/SJU are nearly identical to the average for all of Minnesota's private colleges. Tuition at Saint Benedict and Saint John's has risen faster than the average for all of Minnesota's private colleges in the last ten years. Since 1996-97, tuition and fees (before financial aid) at CSB/SJU have risen by 78%, compared to a total private college average of 73%. Average annual room and board charges at Saint Benedict and Saint John's typically have exceeded the Minnesota private college average by between $100 and $500.
In 2008-09, nearly three-quarters of all CSB and SJU students applied for need-based financial aid. Fully one-fourth applied for merit-based scholarships. The number of students applying for need-based aid has declined at both CSB and SJU since the mid-1990s, a reflection of a rising family income profile. In the last decade, the number of students seeking merit-only scholarships has doubled, similar to the trend at private colleges regionally and nationally. The average ability-to-pay of those seeking need-based financial assistance has more than doubled at both the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University in the last ten years. Nonetheless, in 2008-09, the average student seeking need-based financial aid was able to pay only 41% of the total cost of attendance (inclusive of tuition, fees, room, board, and expenses) at CSB and 46% of the total cost of attendance at SJU.
In fiscal year ending 2009, CSB/SJU students received nearly $90 million in financial aid, including grants, loans, and work-study. Total financial aid awarded has more than doubled since 1997. Institutionally-awarded grant aid is the single largest source of assistance for Saint Benedict and Saint John's students, totaling more than $46 million in 2009 and representing more than half of all financial aid awarded. Ten years earlier, institutional grants comprised only 39% of all aid received by Saint Benedict and Saint John's students. Together, institutional grants and student loans account for 85% of all financial aid awarded to CSB and SJU students.
Revenues and Expenditures
In fiscal year 2010, combined E&G operating expenses at the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University (College of Arts and Sciences) totaled more than $91 million. Over two-thirds of all expenditures were for activities related to academic instruction. Similarly, compensation expenditures - inclusive of employee compensation and student wages - made up about two-thirds of all operating expenditures in FY 2
010.
Like most other private colleges, Saint Benedict and Saint John's receive the majority of their operating income from student tuition. Tuition typically represents about 70% of budgeted operating income each year. Even though financial aid spending has increased significantly, both CSB and SJU have experienced substantial increases in net tuition revenue in the last decade. Between FY 2005 and FY 2010, total net tuition revenue per student at the colleges grew by 18%.
- Table 36: Cost of Attendance
- Table 37: Student Financial Aid Profile
- Table 38: Financial Aid Awarded by Source
- Table 39: Financial Aid Awarded Chart
- Table 40: Unrestricted Revenues and Expenditures
- Table 41: College of Saint Benedict E&G Expense Structure
- Table 42: Saint John’s University E&G Expense Structure
- Table 43: Net Undergraduate Tuition Income
- Table 44: Net Undergraduate Tuition Income Chart
- Table 45: Staff Composition
- Table 46: Full-time and Part-time Staff
- Table 47: Endowment Market Value
- View Entire Chapter
