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Ness, Erik C.; Noland, Brian E. – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2007
As the nation's newest broad-based merit aid program, the Tennessee Education Lottery Scholarship program's generous eligibility requirements may target the very students who are disproportionately left out of similar programs in other states. This article compares the scholarship eligibility rates of Tennessee students with three other states:…
Descriptors: Eligibility, Merit Scholarships, Program Descriptions, Comparative Analysis
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Letteer, Melvin E. – New Directions for Institutional Research, 2008
The Kentucky Educational Excellence Scholarship (KEES) is a broad-based initiative that provides the opportunity for traditional and nontraditional secondary school students and General Educational Development (GED) recipients to earn scholarships that may be used at Kentucky colleges, universities, and selected technical and vocational education…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Tuition Grants, College Bound Students, Scholarships
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Cornwell, Christopher; Mustard, David B. – Education Finance and Policy, 2007
Since the early 1990s, state governments have distributed billions of dollars in financial aid through merit-based college scholarships, most of which have no means tests. The model for most of these programs is Georgia's Helping Outstanding Pupils Educationally (HOPE) scholarship. Given the high correlation between precollege academic achievement…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Family Income, Motor Vehicles, Counties
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Massa, Robert J. – Journal of College Admission, 1991
Assuming that an institution of higher education sees a need to devote resources to merit scholarships while continuing a strong need-based program, examines how the institution can do this, what impact it will have on enrollment, how scholarships should be marketed, and how much money will be required. (NB)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Merit Scholarships, Student Recruitment
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Brown, Raymond – New Directions for Student Services, 2007
This chapter examines some of the salient features of merit-based student financial aid. The author explores the role of merit aid in college admission and how it is used in today's competitive market. (Contains 1 resource.)
Descriptors: College Admission, Student Financial Aid, Merit Scholarships, Recognition (Achievement)
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Matheson, Victor A. – Economics of Education Review, 2007
Graduation rates for male athletes overall as well as men's football and basketball players lag behind those of male non-athletes at Division I colleges and universities. Scholarship athletes, however, are much more likely to be drawn from racial and ethnic groups with lower average graduation rates. After accounting for differences in racial…
Descriptors: Team Sports, Racial Differences, Ethnic Groups, Racial Composition
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Ehrenberg, Ronald G.; Zhang, Liang; Levin, Jared M. – Review of Higher Education, 2006
This paper uses panel data for the 100 colleges and universities at which the largest number of National Merit Scholarship (NMS) winners enrolled in 2003 to test whether an expansion in the number of institutionally funded NMS winners at an institution is associated with a decline in the number of Pell Grant recipients at the institution. Our…
Descriptors: Merit Scholarships, Enrollment, Low Income Groups, Colleges
Kash, Jeffery P.; Lasley, Scott – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2009
The Kentucky Education Excellence Scholarship (KEES) is a merit-based scholarship program intended to increase college access, long-term academic commitment, and retention of top students within the state. KEES uses a heavily graduated award structure and both high school grade point average and standardized test scores to establish award amounts.…
Descriptors: Awards, Grade Point Average, Standardized Tests, Academic Achievement
Campbell, Monica – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
This article features Haitian Education & Leadership Program, Haiti's largest university-scholarship program, which provides merit scholarships to students in the top 10 percent of their high-school classes in the country's poorest areas. On average, the scholarships pay students $4,100, which covers tuition, textbooks, and school supplies,…
Descriptors: Student Costs, Low Income Groups, Access to Education, Nonprofit Organizations
Heller, Donald E. – Connection: The Journal of the New England Board of Higher Education, 2003
Merit-based financial aid has been a growth industry in the United States over the past decade. Much media attention has focused on the use of merit aid by colleges and universities to try to attract academically talented students. In this article, the author argues that merit aid programs are the wrong tools for helping develop a skilled…
Descriptors: Talent, Student Financial Aid, Higher Education, Merit Scholarships
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Allan, George – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 1988
The arguments against merit scholarships are presented, and it is urged, instead that achievement be rewarded at the time and place of its occurrence, i.e., locally. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Higher Education, Merit Scholarships, Student Financial Aid
Chronicle of Higher Education, 1992
This table lists the 62 colleges and universities enrolling the largest number of freshman Merit Scholars named in 1991. It shows the total number of Merit Scholarship winners and the number whose scholarships were paid for by the institution. (DB)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, College Freshmen, Colleges, Enrollment
Brownstein, Andrew – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2001
Describes how Rhodes scholarships and other prestigious awards, once dominated by the Ivy League, are going to other colleges. Winning institutions are employing special advisers and programs to prepare competitors and lure top students and big donors. (EV)
Descriptors: College Programs, Colleges, Competition, Faculty Advisers
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Reindl, Travis – College and University, 2004
The 1990s ushered in a new age in state financial support for college students, with the rise of broad-based merit scholarships. Starting in the South and spreading from there, the premise of the "new generation" of programs was simple--states should be in the business of rewarding student performance, retaining the state's "best…
Descriptors: State Programs, State Aid, Student Financial Aid, College Students
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Winston, Gordon C.; Zimmerman, David J. – Change, 2000
Discussion of the increasing price competition in higher education provides tables, graphs, and analyses of the higher education market and examines implications of offering attractive financial aid packages to better students. Finds price competition results in a greater concentration of talented students at high-resource schools and declining…
Descriptors: Competition, Costs, Higher Education, Merit Scholarships
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