Santa Fe College (2024)

What if I have Florida Prepaid and Florida Bright Futures?

Students with Florida Bright Futures scholarships may also have the Florida Prepaid plan, which is handled by the SF Cashier's Office. If you choose to, you can use both. Because SF tuition is relatively affordable after completing the Florida Residency/Discounted Tuition process, you can save the FL Prepaid plan for another institution if transferring after attending SF.

Using your Florida Prepaid plan:

  • Florida Prepaid is automatically matched to the attending student's Social Security Number using the SF application and the FL Prepaid database.
  • The Prepaid account is used to cover the allowable portions of the SF bill such as tuition and fees (there are usually a small amount of fees left over after Bright Futures funds are applied).
  • Whatever amount remains due on your SF bill viewable on eSantaFe is then covered by your Bright Futures scholarship.
  • Any remaining awarded amount of the scholarship- including the amount that you would have paid in tuition and fees but is now being covered by the FL Prepaid plan- is paid out to the student (disbursed) as a refund.
    • Be sure that you have specified how you want to receive any amount of your refund. All refunds, including Bright Futures scholarships go through SF's vendor-partner, BankMobile.

Is there funding for Florida Bright Futures in the summer?

The Bright Futures Scholarship program allows Bright Futures Florida Academic Scholars (BFFAS) and Bright Futures Florida Medallion Scholars (BFFMS) to receive award funding for summer.

  • Florida Academic Scholars and Florida Medallion Scholarship students will receive an award that covers 100 percent of tuition and applicable fees for the summer term.
    • The additional award for Academic Top Scholars will not be available for summer:

If you are planning to attend during summer, please notify the college by updating your state application for the academic year to indicate you will be attending for:

  • Term 0 if you are newly graduated high school senior entering college for the first time
  • Term 6 if you are a continuing college student or transferring to the college from another school.

Please update this as soon as possible to avoid any delays in your awards.

Funding Requirements

In order to receive summer funding, you:

  • Must meet general Bright Futures eligibility/renewal requirements
  • Must be enrolled in an eligible degree program
  • Must be enrolled in a minimum of 6 credit hours at the time Summer eligibility is determined
  • Must confirm that your Legal Name and Social Security Number matches between Santa Fe College and the State/OSFA

If you receive the scholarship in the summer, you are responsible for completing all funded credit hours in the summer in order to keep your scholarship.

For further information or assistance, you may contact OSFA Customer Service via email at OSFA@fldoe.org or call 888-827-2004.

Can transient students receive Florida Bright Futures funding?

If you are a student at one school temporarily taking courses at another school without transferring, this is called being a Transient student. In most cases, you will have to pay for your classes at your other school out of pocket while you await your scholarship payment to reimburse that upfront cost.

For SF students who wish to receive the Bright Futures scholarship while taking classes elsewhere, you must be approved for, enrolled in and confirmation of attendance for at least six (6) credit hours. The six credit hours may be in any configuration at either school. The confirmation of attendance for the other school must come through the official, electronic methods sanctioned by the State of Florida. At the end of the semester, you must send transcripts to SF immediately for accurate records and to prevent losing your Bright Futures scholarship.

For non-SF students temporarily taking classes at SF, SF can only process Bright Futures scholarships for SF-admitted students per State rules. You will need to pay for your SF classes, and then you will get "reimbursed" with your financial aid from your admitted school.

For both SF and non-SF students, please see the Financial Aid for Transient and Special Programs page to make sure you understand all the requirements and deadlines as you partner with the schools throughout the process. Be sure to send/receive transcripts to the relevant institutions when you are done with the semester.

What are the renewal requirements for the Florida Bright Futures Scholarship?

If you received funding during the current academic year you will automatically be evaluated for renewal at the end of the spring term, and at the end of the summer term if you receive summer funding.

You do not need to submit a renewal application for this to occur. Each spring Santa Fe College sends the Office of Student Financial Assistance (OSFA) every funded student’s GPA and hours earned. Eligibility notifications are then posted to your online account on OSFA's website (usually around July 1st).

Transient students need to submit all transcripts from all attended institutions in enough time for receipt, evaluation and reporting of grades to the state so that eligibility can be determined.

If, in the first year of funding, you do not meet the annual minimum renewal GPA requirement you will be permitted a one-time restoration in a subsequent summer or academic year renewal period (end of spring term).

If you do not meet the minimum earned hours requirement or fail to meet the minimum GPA requirement after the first year of funding you will NOT be permitted a restoration opportunity.

Your summer grade and hours earned after spring evaluation may only be used to meet the scholarship renewal requirements if you have a one-time restoration opportunity available. You must ask a financial aid officer at the postsecondary institution (that reported your spring renewal grades and hours) to submit a summer grade and hours update to the Bright Futures office indicating the adjusted cumulative GPA and hours.

Grade Point Average (GPA) Requirement

The renewal cumulative GPA requirements are outlined in the table below.

RequirementsFlorida Academic Scholars AwardFlorida Medallion Scholars AwardFlorida Gold Seal Vocational Award
Minimum Cumulative GPA(unrounded & unweighted)3.0*2.752.75

Credit Hour Requirement

You must earn credit for all hours paid by your Bright Futures scholarship. Hours paid must equal hours earned. Funds for hours not earned because they are dropped, withdrawn, failed, retaken or for any other reason should be repaid immediately if you calculate that your GPA will meet requirements.

If you receive funding during the current academic year (fall through spring) you are automatically evaluated for renewal at the end of the spring term. The annual credit hour renewal requirement for the Bright Futures Scholarship Program is the measure of the number of credit hours you must earn based on your enrollment type per term. The enrollment type is based on credit hours funded when your disbursem*nt (payment) information is sent to the State/OSFA to request approval.

Therefore, OSFA encourages students to use the Bright Futures Credit Hour Interactive Tool. This tool allows students to customize the credit hour requirement to their individual enrollment scenario per term.

Renewal into a Different Scholarship Type

  • Florida Academic Scholars (FAS) with 2.75-2.99 GPA at the end of the renewal period will renew as Florida Medallion Scholars (FMS). If the GPA is improved above a 3.0 in a subsequent renewal period, your eligibility will restore as a FAS, using the one-time restoration opportunity.
  • If you earned the FMS, Gold Seal CAPE Scholars (GSC), or Gold Seal Vocational Scholars (GSV) award in high school you may not renew to the FAS award.
  • A GSC or GSV award may not renew to the FMS.

If I do not complete my classes am I required to repay Bright Futures funds?

If you drop or withdraw after the disbursem*nt process for your scholarship has started, (see Academic Calendar) you are required, by the state of Florida, to repay Santa Fe College for any credits for which Bright Futures paid. Note: If the drop or withdraw was due to an extenuating/critical situation, please inform the Financial Aid Office to see if you may qualify for a Bright Futures Appeal.

The College will pay this to the State on your behalf, and schools who are participating in State programs are permitted to seek repayment of this amount from the student.

  • Any amount that the College repays for this process will be billed to the student, creating a student financial obligation to the College.
  • If a student does not pay funds due to Santa Fe College to cover their balance, the student’s records will be placed on financial hold.
  • A financial hold or obligation means you will not be permitted to register for classes or receive transcripts until the balance is paid.

If you do not repay the Bright Futures funded classes dropped or withdrawn, or successfully appeal, by the end of the current academic year, you will not be eligible for renewal or funding for the subsequent academic year. Repaying after the end of the current academic year deadline will clear your financial obligation to Santa Fe College, but may not allow you to be eligible for Bright Futures.

Mini-Terms/Flex-Terms (i.e. Fall B)

Your award amount is calculated based on your enrollment as of the time your scholarship is disbursed (paid out). If you are enrolled in mini-terms / sessions / flex-terms (like Fall B or Summer A, etc.), you receive scholarship funds for those classes too! This also means that you are responsible for completing those courses. Those classes are subject to the terms of Repayment (covered below), and you should not drop them even if you are within the college's deadlines for adding and dropping within that mini-term.

Other Repayment Situations

Bright Futures scholarships require credits paid to equal credits earned. If you anticipate you will not earn credit in a course while receiving Bright Futures during that term, you may want to request the ability to return the funds for that course to prevent loss of your scholarship. Such situations include:

  • Completing a course on a C or Better Appeal
  • Receiving a "D" or "F" grade in a course (no credits earned)
  • Retaking a course during a Bright Futures evaluation period
  • Taking courses for which you've already earned prior credit (i.e. late/AP/IB transcripts)
  • Any other situations that cause credits not to be earned/reported on your transcript

Can I restore or reinstate my Bright Futures Scholarship?

One-Time Restoration Opportunity

After your first year of funding, if your cumulative GPA is below 2.75, you may use that summer to increase your GPA. If, at the end of the summer term your GPA is still below the minimum 2.75, you will have until the end of the second year to bring the GPA up to at least a 2.75. You may then apply for a One Time Reinstatement at the Bright Futures website through the state of Florida. The summer term may be used for GPA renewal ONLY after first year of funding.

You are not eligible for Reinstatement/Restoration if your GPA falls below 2.75 after the first year.

For more information about restoration, visit the "Renewing Your Award" section on the Bright Futures website.

Reinstatement

If you are an eligible student who did not receive funding during the previous academic year you may be able to apply for scholarship funding as a reinstating student.

If you are a first year in college student receiving Bright Futures, your summer grades and hours earned after the spring evaluation may be used if necessary, to meet the scholarship renewal requirements. To use this provision, you must submit an appeal for reinstatement to the Financial Aid Office, which will notify the financial aid office that you would like to submit a grade and hours update to the Bright Futures/OSFA office with the adjusted cumulative GPA and/or hours.

If you attended another college or university and have transfer credits, the transfer credits may be used in the cumulative GPA calculation.

For more information about reinstatement, visit the " Renewing Your Award" section on the Bright Futures website.

Can I appeal if I do not meet renewal requirements for Bright Futures?

A scholarship appeal should only be submitted when you did not meet scholarship criteria based on extenuating circ*mstances beyond your control. Please refer to the Bright Futures Appeal Worksheet available on the financial aid appeals web page.

Florida Department of Education Office of Student Financial Assistance (OSFA)

Contact Number: 1-888-827-2004

For easy access to program information, application and award status, students are responsible for regularly checking their State account on the Bright Futures Website.

Santa Fe College’s Bright Futures State School Code is 012.

Santa Fe College (2024)

FAQs

What is Santa Fe's acceptance rate? ›

What is the acceptance rate for Santa Fe? Santa Fe College admissions is not selective with an acceptance rate of 100%. The regular admissions application deadline for Santa Fe College is August 1.

What GPA do you need to get into Santa Fe College? ›

High School students or student that have never attended college must provide official high school transcripts showing a minimum 2.0 GPA.

What percentage of students graduate from Santa Fe College? ›

Overview
20172018
Graduation Rate50%57%
Transfer-out Rate19%15%

What is the standards of progress GPA for Santa Fe College? ›

To maintain satisfactory academic progress, students must achieve a minimum term and overall grade point average (GPA) of 2.0 or higher each term.

Is it worth going to Santa Fe? ›

Santa Fe is one of America's most historic, artistic, and fascinating cities. Known as “The City Different,” the nation's oldest state capital city is a place unlike any other in the world.

Why Santa Fe is expensive? ›

Now that it features a third-row seat, a standard turbocharged engine, and a significantly reworked look inside and out, it's no surprise that the redesigned 2024 Hyundai Santa Fe costs a lot more than its predecessor.

Do colleges accept 1.7 GPA? ›

Colleges with Lower GPA Requirements: While most colleges have GPA requirements above 1.7, there are some institutions with lower guidelines. These schools may consider your application holistically, taking into account your personal circ*mstances, extracurriculars, and other factors along with your GPA.

Do any colleges accept a 1.6 GPA? ›

The answer is No. The national average for a GPA is around 3.0 and a 1.6 GPA puts you below that average. A 1.6 GPA means that you've gotten only C-s and D+s in your high school classes so far. Since this GPA is significantly below a 2.0, it will make things very difficult for you in the college application process.

Can you get into any college with a 1.7 GPA? ›

A 1.7 is below the level of the average accepted student at all the colleges we have in our database, so it will put a strain on the application process. You'll need to accept that every school where you apply will end up being a reach for you.

What is the tuition for Santa Fe College? ›

Is Santa Fe a four year college? ›

Santa Fe College offers four-year degrees for students building the foundation for a lifelong career. Degree offerings are specifically designed to meet the workforce needs in North Central Florida.

Is Santa Fe College nationally accredited? ›

Santa Fe College is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) to award associate and baccalaureate degrees.

Is a 3.777 GPA good? ›

A 3.7 GPA is a Grade Point Average of 3.7 on a 4.0 scale. It indicates that you've earned a predominantly A- average in your courses. A 3.7 GPA is considered to be a very good GPA and is often an indicator of strong academic performance.

Is a 3.428 GPA good? ›

A 3.4 is on the verge of an A- and demonstrates consistently good test-taking, studying, and research skills. A 3.4 is comfortably above the national average GPA for high school graduates and is considered competitive at most colleges and universities.

Is a 3.240 GPA good? ›

A 3.2 is above-average and raising it will take near-perfect work, but don't be discouraged. With hard work you can raise your GPA from good to great!

What percentage of Santa Fe is white? ›

Table
Population
White alone, not Hispanic or Latino, percent 40.0% 58.9%
Population Characteristics
Veterans, 2018-20224,48217,038,807
Foreign born persons, percent, 2018-202214.7%13.7%
57 more rows

How many kids from Santa Fe get into the UF? ›

In fact, the majority of SF students who apply to UF each semester are admitted, including 88 percent of students in the SF honors program. Admission is guaranteed into 17 liberal arts programs at UF.

What is Santa Fe College known for? ›

Santa Fe College was named the winner of the 2015 Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence by the prestigious Aspen Institute (Opens in new window) . SF was named number one over 1,000 institutions nationwide and has been in the top 10 of U.S. community colleges since 2012.

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