Thank you, Jon. Good evening, everyone. Before we jump into the key drivers of earnings for the quarter, I wanted to mention a change to our guidance metrics that you may have noticed in our earnings release, investor presentation. We have discontinued reporting non-GAAP core earnings and its related metrics, as it has been identical to our GAAP earnings in the last 8 quarters, including this quarter. As such, for purposes of our 2024 guidance, we are now using GAAP earnings in place of non-GAAP core earnings in the calculation of the earnings per common share metric. However, the guidance range is unchanged at $2.60 to $2.70. Now for a discussion of key drivers of earnings. Year after year, our quality loan portfolio generated significant net interest income. For the first quarter of 2024, we earned $387 million of net interest income. This is down 4% from the prior year quarter and level with the fourth quarter of 2023. Although average yields of interest-earning assets are up about 45 basis points over the year ago quarter, average interest-earning asset balances are down slightly, which resulted in a $26 million decrease in interest income from the year ago period. Interest expense was $44 million higher as borrowing rates increased approximately 75 basis points from the prior year. Net interest margin for the first quarter was 5.5% compared to 5.7% in the year ago quarter. We continue to believe over the long term that low to mid-5% is the appropriate NIM target. Our total provision for credit losses in the income statement was $12 million first quarter 2024. This is comprised of an increase in provision of $145 million related to volume and prepayment assumption updates, offset by a release of $133 million associated with the $2.1 billion loan sale we completed during the quarter. The majority of the increase of provision is related to origination volume during the main peak that occurs in the first quarter of each year. Additionally, we reduced our long-term prepayment assumption, which accounted for approximately 26% of the increase during the quarter. Although this change in assumption has a negative impact on provision, this is a long-term positive as we will continue to keep our interest-earning assets on our balance sheet for a longer period of time. Net charge-offs for our private education loan portfolio in the first quarter were $83 million or 2.1%, consistent with the year ago quarter. Our private education loan reserve at the end of the first quarter is $1.4 billion. or 6.1% of total student loan exposure, which includes the on-balance sheet portfolio plus the accrued interest receivable of $1.4 billion. Our reserve rate shows improvement over the 6.4% in the prior year quarter and is consistent with levels at the end of 2023. Private education loans delinquent 30 days or more, 3.4% of loans in repayment, a decrease from 3.9% at the end of 2023 and consistent with the 3.4% at the end of the year ago quarter. As Jon mentioned earlier, we've refined our disclosure around both delinquencies and forbearance to get more visibility into our credit performance. When adjusting the numbers that I just discussed to remove the borrowers who are in a 3-month qualifying period related to one of our new programs, improvement in delinquencies is compelling. At the end of the first quarter, loans delinquent 30 days or more, becomes 2.7% of loans in repayment as compared to 3.2% at the end of 2023 and 3.1% in the year ago quarter. We believe that this is a medium-term indicator of the success of the new programs, and we'll continue to monitor and disclose performance in the coming quarters. First quarter operating expenses were $160 million compared to $143 million in the prior quarter and $155 million in the year ago quarter. This was a 4% increase compared to the first quarter of 2023. The majority of this increase relates to increase in volume in the quarter compared to the prior year, with applications increasing 4% and disbursements increasing 6%. Total noninterest expenses in the first quarter were $162 million compared to $202 million in the prior quarter and $157 million in the year ago quarter. Finally, our liquidity and capital positions are solid. We ended the quarter with liquidity of 19.1% of total assets. At the end of the first quarter, total risk-based capital was 13.5% and common equity Tier 1 capital was 12.3%. Another measure -- the loss absorption capacity of the balance sheet is GAAP equity plus loan loss reserves over risk-weighted assets, which was a very strong 16.2% We believe, we're well positioned to continue to grow our business and return capital to shareholders going forward. I'll now turn the call back to Jon.