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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
Ruffalo Noel Levitz, 2022
What are the experiences, expectations, and challenges of college-bound high school students and their families regarding college financing? To answer that question, Ruffalo Noel Levitz (RNL), Ardeo Education, and PLEXUSS surveyed 1,250 high school students from the 11th and 12th grades about how they become interested in colleges and…
Descriptors: High School Students, Student Attitudes, Paying for College, Student Costs
Ruffalo Noel Levitz, 2021
In an era of escalating higher education costs, students and families need to be aware of all of their options for financing college and how those financing options work. Financing remains one the top factors for choosing a college, especially for students with greater financial need. Those who do not receive the award packages and financial…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Finance, Costs, Student Financial Aid
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Clark, Tom; Hordósy, Rita; Vickers, Dan – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2019
This article critically examines how undergraduate students in a red brick university in the North of England have experienced the threefold rise in tuition fees since 2012, with particular attention on how they have begun to understand and negotiate the process of indebtedness. Drawing on a corpus of 118 interviews conducted with a group of 40…
Descriptors: Student Experience, Debt (Financial), Income Contingent Loans, Loan Repayment
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Furuta, Kazuhisa – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
A growing number of families around the world are relying on student loans to pay for university under recent cost-sharing policies. However, it remains unclear to what extent university costs and the likelihood of needing student loans affect decisions in the early stages of education. This article examines the influence of parents' attitudes…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Mothers, Paying for College, Student Costs
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Queenan, Elisa P.; Street, Brian D. – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2021
The cost of post-secondary education (PE) continues to increase, which has contributed to elevating federal loan demand, and as of the fourth quarter of 2020, equaling a debt of $1.56 trillion in the US. The purpose of this research was to compare two post-secondary institutions for specific alignment with the local labor market, examine…
Descriptors: Student Costs, Paying for College, Federal Aid, Debt (Financial)
Tandberg, David; Laderman, Sophia; Carlson, Andy – State Higher Education Executive Officers, 2017
This white paper, an update to the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association's (SHEEO's) 2014 "Moving the Needle" report (Carlson & Zaback, 2014), examines innovative policies to improve college affordability for students from families in the two lowest income quintiles, using updated data and analyses. The policies…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Student Costs, Federal State Relationship, College Students
Murphy, Richard; Scott-Clayton, Judith; Wyness, Gill – Centre for Economic Performance, 2018
Despite increasing financial pressures on higher education systems throughout the world, many governments remain resolutely opposed to the introduction of tuition fees, and some countries and states where tuition fees have been long established are now reconsidering free higher education. This paper examines the consequences of charging tuition…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Paying for College, Student Costs, Tuition
Akers, Elizabeth J.; Chingos, Matthew M. – Brookings Institution, 2014
Improving the college search process by making college costs more transparent to potential students and their families has been a primary focus of recent higher education policy efforts. But the importance of this information does not end at the university gates. In order to make prudent decisions about what to study, how many courses to take, and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Costs, Paying for College, Loan Repayment
National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, 2016
The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) and the Association for the Study of Higher Education (ASHE) embarked on a yearlong effort to identify and examine ways to make financial aid research more relevant to financial aid practitioners. To inform their recommendations, they surveyed NASFAA members, reviewed the…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Educational Research, Theory Practice Relationship, Research and Development
Ertl, Hubert; Carasso, Helen; Holmes, Craig – Centre on Skills, Knowledge and Organisational Performance (SKOPE), 2013
Politicians regularly cite an expected individual economic gain (the 'graduate premium') as a justification for greater private contributions to the cost of higher education, most recently as part of the rationale for the increase in England of the cap on Home/EU undergraduate fees to £9000 from 2012 (e.g. Willetts 2011a). However, the choices…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Costs, Outcomes of Education, College Applicants
Sallie Mae, Inc., 2014
Sallie Mae has conducted "How America Pays for College" annually since 2008, providing information about the resources American families invest in an undergraduate college education. This study focuses particularly on the planning and payment behaviors in a given academic year. Now in its seventh year, the study provides a compelling…
Descriptors: Paying for College, National Surveys, Parent Surveys, Student Surveys
Cross, Dolores; Olinsky, Arlene – 1984
The characteristics of student loan borrowers and differences between those who repay their loans and those who default are examined. Data are based on the New York State Higher Education Services Corporation Guaranteed Student Loan database and responses to a questionnaire mailed in spring 1984 to a sample of New York State student loan…
Descriptors: Credit (Finance), Economic Factors, Employment, Financial Problems
Watkins, Beverly T. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1990
According to a report from the National Research Council, 53 percent of those who received doctorates in 1987-88 did not owe any money for their education. Graduates in engineering and the physical sciences were less likely to be in debt than those in the humanities, life sciences, and social sciences. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Graduates, Debt (Financial), Doctoral Degrees, Educational Finance
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Ehrenberg, Ronald G. – Journal of Legal Education, 1989
The article presents an econometric analysis of the interrelationships between law school tuition levels, law school quality, law faculty salaries, and the starting salaries of graduates. It then analyzes recent data and concludes that, while tuition increases have outpaced starting salaries, law school attendance is still a good investment.…
Descriptors: Economic Research, Economic Status, Higher Education, Investment
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Mortenson, Thomas G. – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 1989
This study examines attitudes of Americans toward borrowing to finance educational expenses over the period from 1959 to 1983. The study finds that Americans have had a consistently favorable view toward educational loans. People from low-income backgrounds are less likely to have a positive attitude toward borrowing. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Access to Education, Grants, Higher Education
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