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Diego A. Briones; Nathaniel Ruby; Sarah Turner – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2024
For workers employed in the public and nonprofit sectors, the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program offers the potential for full forgiveness of federal student loans for those with 10 years of full-time work experience. A year-long waiver issued by the Department of Education in 2021 to address administrative problems in program access…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Eligibility, Federal Programs, Loan Repayment
Brian Backstrom – Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, 2024
Starting in 2015, New York State began offering college financial assistance to individuals who have experienced foster care at any point after the age of 13. Recognizing the unique needs of this student population and the desire to provide additional support, the Foster Youth College Success Initiative (FYCSI) was created to encourage and ease…
Descriptors: College Students, Foster Care, Student Financial Aid, Paying for College
Jacob, Brian; Jones, Damon; Keys, Benjamin J. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2023
We explore how much borrowers value student debt relief, in the setting of the federal Teacher Loan Forgiveness (TLF) program, and further document whether information and eligibility for this program affect teacher employment decisions. The program cancels between $5,000 and $17,500 in debt for teachers who remain employed in a high-need school…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Loan Repayment, Debt (Financial), Eligibility
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Wolfgram, Matthew; Kendall, Nancy – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2023
The United States is experiencing state disinvestment from higher education and significant wealth inequality. This article documents how low-income college students both experience and attempt to manage these contexts in their daily lives at a public flagship university in the American Midwest. We theorize these experiences as forms of precarity…
Descriptors: Public Colleges, Low Income Students, Student Experience, College Students
Wisconsin Policy Forum, 2023
After trailing the national average for five years, funding per student at public colleges and universities in Wisconsin overtook it in 2021. State and local tax and tuition funding per student dropped nationally after adjusting for inflation and rose in Wisconsin, though it remains lower for four-year campuses in Wisconsin. The state's colleges…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Public Colleges, Universities, College Enrollment
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David C. Ribar; Ross Rubenstein – Education Finance and Policy, 2023
Georgia offers two merit-based scholarships to in-state college students: HOPE Scholarships, which provide partial tuition support, and Zell Miller Scholarships, which provide full tuition support but with stricter eligibility and retention conditions. Studies have examined retention of these scholarships but not other dynamics, including gaining…
Descriptors: Universities, Merit Scholarships, Tuition, Paying for College
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Chiang, Tom, Jr. – Penn GSE Perspectives on Urban Education, 2022
Obtaining a college degree is positively correlated with gains in socioeconomic mobility. However, college is expensive. Given the importance of college in increasing social mobility, lawmakers have proposed eliminating student debt. Joe Biden, for example, has incorporated eliminating student debt into his presidential campaign promise. While…
Descriptors: College Programs, Student Loan Programs, Loan Repayment, Debt (Financial)
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John Dubber – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2024
This article explores major challenges facing students, such as mental health, financial hardship and employability. It suggests that well supported and appropriately funded students' unions can play a vital role in improving the experience of students. Their work can be crucial in ensuring students have influence on university decision making, it…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Unions, Participative Decision Making, Mental Health
Brett, James T. – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2021
The price of higher education continues to increase, and millions of Americans struggle with student loan debt. At the same time, a college degree is for so many a path to career success and financial security, and our region's employers depend on a talented pipeline of highly skilled workers to continue to grow and thrive. Pell Grants were…
Descriptors: Grants, Federal Aid, Paying for College, Higher Education
Kimball, Bruce A. – Johns Hopkins University Press, 2023
As endowments and fundraising campaigns have skyrocketed in recent decades, critics have attacked higher education for steeply increasing its production cost and price and the snowballing debt of students. In "Wealth, Cost, and Price in American Higher Education," Bruce A. Kimball and Sarah M. Iler reveal how these trends began 150 years…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Student Costs, Higher Education, Debt (Financial)
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Amadu Jacky Kaba – Higher Education Studies, 2024
Utilizing the concept of resilience, this paper examines the attainment of bachelor's degrees or higher by Black Americans in 2012 and 2022. In 2012, 3.668 million Black Americans aged 18 and over had at least a bachelor's degree, with women accounting for 58.5% and men accounting for 41.5 percent. In 2022, that figure increased to 5.547 million…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, African Americans, Sex, Resilience (Psychology)
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Brighouse, Harry; Mullane, Kailey – Theory and Research in Education, 2023
Christopher Martin argues that an interest in strong autonomy supports a right to debt-free higher education and that making tuition free is the best way of enacting that right. We argue that making higher education tuition free would, in the absence of other countervailing measure, maldistribute strong autonomy, even in ideal conditions. We also…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Access to Education, Higher Education, Educational Finance
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Jones, Willis A. – Journal of Higher Education, 2022
In 2015, 65 universities in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I autonomous conferences changed their scholarship policy by allowing universities to give student-athletes cost of attendance stipends. While student-athletes welcomed this policy change, many people within the higher education community felt the policy change…
Descriptors: College Athletics, Educational Policy, Student Costs, Student Athletes
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Bass, Elizabeth – Educational Studies, 2021
The Post-9/11 GI Bill provides educational assistance to veterans and certain dependents. Veterans have had educational benefits provided by the Department of Veterans Affairs since World War II, but no prior GI bill programmes have been as comprehensive or administratively complex. Covered benefits include all tuition and fees at any public…
Descriptors: Veterans, Federal Legislation, Paying for College, Student Costs
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Gabriele Griffin – Higher Education Studies, 2023
The purpose of this article is to analyse the gendered motivations of students to undertake doctoral research in a low-income country (LIC), Mozambique. Most research on PhD student motivation is done in high-income countries where the drivers for doing a PhD are quite different from those of people living in LICs. Drawing on original empirical…
Descriptors: Low Income, Developing Nations, Foreign Countries, Doctoral Programs
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