like many students, barbara hann financed her education partially through loans. these loans included three federally insured stafford loans of $7,500 each ($22,500 in total). hann believed that she repaid the loans, but when later, she filed a chapter 13 petition, educational credit management corp. (ecmc) filed an unsecured proof of claim based on the loans. hann objected. at a hearing at which ecmc failed to appear, hann submitted correspondence from the lender that indicated the loans had been paid. the court entered an order sustaining hann's objection. despite the order, can ecmc resume its effort to collect on hann's loans? the alleged creditor in this case is select . the alleged debtor in this case is select . a chapter 13 bankruptcy filing is for select . to be entitled to receive payments from the debtor's estate, a creditor must file a select . student loans generally select dischargeable in bankruptcy. in this case, ecmc filed a select claim. the court entered an order select hann's claim and select ecmc's claim, which was likely based on select . therefore, based on the court's order ecmc select resume its effort to collect on hann's loans. assume that hann did not pay her student loans full, and did not have any supporting evidence. given these facts, the court likely would have entered an order select hann's claim and select ecmc's claim. then, ecmc select resume its effort to collect on hann's loans.