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Young, Kenneth E., Ed. – 1974
This publication presents papers from an invitational seminar, the case for Low-Tuition Public Higher Education, February 1974 and other useful documents on the same subject. Topics cover some introductory perspectives on low tuition; financing higher education; an analysis of recent tuition policy recommendations; equity and the middle class; a…
Descriptors: Educational Economics, Educational Finance, Federal Aid, Financial Support
Heller, Donald E. – 1996
This report addresses the relationship between tuition, financial aid, and access to public higher education through an economic analysis of data from individual states from 1976 to 1993. The analysis focuses on states, rather than the individual, as the unit of observation and how state policies regarding the setting of tuition rates and…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Enrollment Influences, Enrollment Rate, Financial Support
Pickens, William H. – 1980
Recurrent education may be defined as formal education provided outside of the traditional academic context for the purposes of: (1) continuing education in professional and vocational fields; (2) part-time instruction toward an academic or vocational degree; and (3) personal or social development. In California, while state policy encourages…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Continuing Education, Financial Support, Lifelong Learning
Losco, Joseph; Fife, Brian L. – 1997
This paper examines expenditure patterns at higher education institutions in recent years, in light of the spiraling cost of higher education. It utilizes data from the U.S. Department of Education's Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS), begun in 1986, and the Higher Education General Information Survey (HEGIS), which goes back…
Descriptors: Budgeting, College Instruction, Costs, Educational Facilities
Viehland, Dennis W.; And Others – 1981
The emerging trend in state higher education finance policy to use and index to establish tuition and fee levels at public institutions was studied, based on a 1980 national survey of tuition-setting policies. It was found that, increasingly, states are adopting indexing to cost of education as an established policy for determining tuition: 14…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Budgeting, Cost Indexes, Enrollment Influences
Brodigan, David L.; And Others – 1981
The effects of concern about price of college and student aptitude for college upon the tendencies of parents and students to change their preference for private colleges to public colleges at the application stage of the college selection process were examined through two surveys conducted by Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota. In one…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, College Applicants, College Bound Students, College Choice
Pickens, William H. – 1982
Fiscal support for higher education and policy concerns at the state level during difficult financial times are discussed, with specific reference to the western states. States vary widely in several ways: the strength of their economies, the actions of legislatures and voters to reduce the revenues or the expenditure base of state and local…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Access to Education, Budgeting, College Choice
Viehland, Dennis; And Others – 1980
Considerations for establishing a system for indexing tuition and fees to the cost of education and implications for state policy are examined. It is suggested that the attraction of the indexing approach to tuition arises from a number of causes including the upward pressure on tuition created by changing demographic and fiscal conditions.…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Budgeting, College Students, Cost Indexes