ISAs hold great potential for expanding access, affordability, accountability, and equity to postsecondary education; to realize it, regulators must engage meaningfully with providers to establish regulations that place learners first. A robust dialogue between regulators and ISA providers can help ensure existing law is applied to ISAs in a way that is intentional and valuable for both learners and providers.
And regulators are not the only ones with more work to do. In addition to proactively engaging with regulators, ISA providers should carefully monitor their impact by studying their internal data, regularly solicit learner feedback on the design and disclosure forms of their ISAs, and work with researchers who wish to conduct research on the ISA model and how it impacts learners and equity.
The potential for clarity on how federal regulations govern ISAs is an opportunity to recognize that regulation need not come at the expense of innovation, and can potentially even promote innovation. But to achieve this, we must ensure that a clear and thoughtful framework is adopted that prioritizes consumer protections and enables new financing models to fulfill their goal of creating a more outcomes-based, equitable postsecondary education and training system.