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Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education, 2024
Ensuring postsecondary education is affordable for Kentuckians is a top priority of the Council on Postsecondary Education (CPE) and higher education institutions. Maintaining access to life-changing postsecondary credentials benefits both individuals and the state alike. This inaugural report on undergraduate student debt demonstrates that…
Descriptors: Public Colleges, Student Costs, Paying for College, Debt (Financial)
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Worsham, Rachel – Journal of Higher Education, 2023
In 2016, the North Carolina legislature implemented the North Carolina Fixed Tuition Program. This policy ensures that, once enrolled, an undergraduate student's tuition rate at any of the state's four-year public colleges will not increase for eight consecutive semesters of enrollment. While touted as an effort to increase affordability by…
Descriptors: Tuition, Public Colleges, Undergraduate Students, Paying for College
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Taylor Delaney; Dave E. Marcotte – Journal of Higher Education, 2024
How have changes in the price of enrolling full time at public 2- and 4-year colleges affected student decisions about whether and where to enroll in college? Using local differences in the growth of tuition at community colleges and public 4-year colleges, we study the impact of public higher education tuition prices on the post-secondary…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Public Colleges, Higher Education, College Enrollment
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Luke T. Russell; Chang Su-Russell – Journal of American College Health, 2024
Objective: To evaluate how family functioning, family contributions to college expenses, and access to mentors are associated with college student's self-reported health and flourishing, and to test for moderation by family structure. Participants: Undergraduate college students (N = 238) recruited through an email list-serve at a large midwestern…
Descriptors: Family Relationship, Paying for College, Educational Finance, Mentors
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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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Alsaeed Alshamy; Abdourahmane Barry – SAGE Open, 2024
The study aimed at investigating the experiences of graduate students who experience, for the first-time, cost-sharing policies in Saudi public universities. The study used the explanatory sequential mixed methods approach, involving a two-phase data collection. First, quantitative data were collected through a questionnaire administered to…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Foreign Countries, Public Colleges, Student Costs
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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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F. King Alexander; Stephen G. Katsinas; Noel E. Keeney; Nathaniel J. Bray – Journal of Education Finance, 2023
Many important issues are being debated including but not limited to student debt reduction, a national policy for K-14 that may include free community college education, and the creation of new federal funding policies in the form of federal matching or maintenance of effort policies that hold state legislatures more accountable for maintaining…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Public Colleges, Paying for College, Educational Finance
Donald E. Heller – Institute for College Access & Success, 2024
In December 2023, TICAS published new research on the College Affordability Gap--the gap between students' total cost of attendance and non-loan aid available to them--in California, Michigan, and New York, with a focus on students eligible for Pell Grants. Our new report builds on this research with data from nine additional states (Colorado,…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Access to Education, Federal Aid, Grants
Tyler L. Johnson – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The Parent PLUS loan covers the financial gap of a student's educational expenses after other forms of financial assistance. Depending on the unmet need, the PLUS loan amount borrowed can be tens of thousands of dollars for a single academic year. In this research article, I provide results from evaluating financial aid offers at Missouri public,…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Student Loan Programs, Parent Financial Contribution, College Students
Christopher Ledford – Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education, 2023
In Kentucky and around the nation, the cost of college attendance has risen steadily over the past two decades, while total undergraduate enrollment has leveled off or declined. Kentucky has taken aggressive measures to limit tuition increases and increase state and institutional aid; nevertheless, increasing college costs may be constricting our…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, In State Students, Public Colleges, Financial Needs
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Liang Zhang – Journal of Higher Education, 2024
Using data from four waves of the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS) in 2004, 2008, 2012, and 2016, this study examines the effect of the PGIB on veterans' student loans. Results indicate that the PGIB has significantly affected veteran students' borrowing behavior, with an average $1,100 reduction in Stafford Loans. Veteran students…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Veterans, Debt (Financial), Paying for College
Cook, Emily E.; Turner, Sarah – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022
Substantial increases in public university tuition often raise concerns about college affordability. But assessment of the impacts on low- and moderate-income families requires consideration of whether net tuition--tuition less grant aid--has increased commensurately. This paper describes recent shifts in net tuition by family income and…
Descriptors: Public Colleges, Tuition, Paying for College, Student Costs
Southern Regional Education Board (SREB), 2021
Making college more affordable for families has been a critical issue for states in the SREB region for many years. Now the negative economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic have created additional barriers to college affordability. This brief provides an overview of college affordability in the SREB region based on data from the 2017-2018…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Costs, COVID-19, Pandemics
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