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Jason Delisle; Jason Cohn – Urban Institute, 2023
The Biden administration is pursuing two higher education policies through a series of rulemaking processes that aim to make higher education more affordable and less risky for students. One policy focuses on the system's back end by helping students repay their loans, and the other focuses on the front end by cutting off access to federal aid for…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Standards, Higher Education, Loan Repayment
Carnevale, Anthony P.; Wenzinger, Emma; Cheah, Ban – Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, 2022
Majoring in business typically pays off. While graduates' earnings and federal student loan debt vary by institution and degree level, the majority of business programs lead to median earnings that are roughly 10 times graduates' debt payments two years after program completion. "The Most Popular Degree Pays Off: Ranking the Economic Value of…
Descriptors: Business Education, Business Schools, College Programs, Economic Impact
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Carol Anne Spreen; Shari-Lee Carter – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2025
This article will explain how a series of educator strikes in 2022 in Ghana led to increased awareness of and calls for tax justice and debt relief from a growing movement of public sector workers and civil society organisations. We chart how the issues and demands of teacher organisations and other public sector workers shifted and increased over…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Unions, Teacher Strikes, Teacher Associations
Jeffrey T. Denning; Lesley J. Turner – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2024
This paper documents several facts about graduate program graduation rates using administrative data covering public and nonprofit graduate students in Texas. Despite conventional wisdom that most graduate students complete their programs, only 58 percent of who started their program in 2004 graduated within 6 years. Between the 2004 and 2013…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Graduation Rate, Trend Analysis, Salaries
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Brenda M. Coppard; Angie Lampe; Yongyue Qi; Samantha Torre; Stefany Shaibi; Gianluca Del Rossi – Journal of Occupational Therapy Education, 2024
A growing amount of research examines the personal and financial burden of students in healthcare programs who graduate with large amounts of student loan debt. However, a paucity of literature addresses occupational therapists' student loan debt burden. This study was conducted to describe the context of occupational therapists who have…
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Allied Health Personnel, Occupational Therapy, Student Financial Aid
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Chen, Rong; Smith, Katie N. – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2023
Based on combined data from Baccalaureate & Beyond (B&B:16/17), Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS), and Barron's Profiles of American Colleges, this study utilizes zero-inflated beta regression methods and analyzes individual and institutional factors that predict debt burden by gender. Results show that women are less…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Student Financial Aid, Debt (Financial), Individual Characteristics
Laura Szabo-Kubitz – Institute for College Access & Success, 2024
Five years after our 2019 analysis of student borrowing rates across the University of California (UC) system, TICAS partnered with the University of California Student Association (UCSA) again to evaluate the state of affordability and student debt for undergraduates at the UC, and their implications for student success. While our analysis finds…
Descriptors: College Students, Debt (Financial), Student Costs, Bachelors Degrees
Marc Folch Cordoncillo – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This dissertation consists of two essays at the intersection of the economics of education and inequality. The first chapter analyzes how increasing levels of student debt affect career and housing choices of bachelor's degree recipients in the United States. Using within-cohort across-school variations in financial aid policies, it shows that…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Debt (Financial), Financial Problems, Paying for College
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Caroline Casey; Anna Mountford-Zimdars – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
This original study presents findings from a study of members of the first cohort of legal degree apprentices. Introduced in the UK in 2016, legal degree apprenticeships (LAs) remove uncertainty towards legal qualification in an otherwise competitive graduate recruitment environment and could help to increase social mobility into the professions.…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Graduate Study, Graduate Students, Apprenticeships
Baum, Sandy; Delisle, Jason – Urban Institute, 2022
The federal government now offers a multitude of complicated income-driven repayment (IDR) plans that are difficult to understand, enroll in, and stay in. Many students who would benefit from IDR do not enroll, and others will have large amounts of debt forgiven despite earning high wages. The current problems with IDR are not an indictment of the…
Descriptors: Income, Student Financial Aid, Loan Repayment, Debt (Financial)
Blagg, Kristin – Urban Institute, 2022
Enrollment in American graduate degree programs is increasing, even as undergraduate enrollment declines continue in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. With rising numbers of graduate awards, there has been increased attention on understanding the value of these degrees, especially master's degrees. With more workers attaining higher credentials,…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, Enrollment Trends, Masters Degrees, Doctoral Degrees
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Saleh, Amany; Yu, Qian; Leslie, H. Steve; Seydel, John – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
Given the facts that women still earn significantly less than men, that most American students rely on loans to attend college, that tuition in higher education has increased, and that women have to take more students loans than men, can we still claim that we are closing the gender gap? Do females have more burdens to pay off their student loans…
Descriptors: Sex Fairness, Student Financial Aid, Loan Repayment, Income
Delisle, Jason; Cohn, Jason – Urban Institute, 2022
Policymakers enacted a series of reforms in the mid-2000s that significantly expanded benefits in the federal student loan program for students pursuing graduate degrees. These reforms allow students to borrow up to the full cost of attendance for their degrees and use an Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) program that offers loan forgiveness after 20…
Descriptors: Masters Degrees, Debt (Financial), Wages, Income
Alyssa LaPatriello – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This current dissertation used case study (Yin, 2018) to examine United States female college students' perceptions of their financial literacy, especially with respect to their debt accumulation and the gender wage gap, at a public, 4-year institution in New Jersey. It answered the following research questions: How are student debt, financial…
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Student Attitudes, Financial Literacy, Females
Schak, J. Oliver – Project on Student Debt, 2021
A college degree or credential is a crucial stepping-stone to the middle class, and American colleges and universities play an essential role in building a more prosperous, equitable country. However, too many colleges routinely and disproportionately enroll students who end up struggling to repay or, worse, default on their student debt. "A…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Debt (Financial), Higher Education, Accountability
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