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Nations, Jennifer M. – History of Education Quarterly, 2021
The size and cost of US public higher education, funded largely by government, grew continuously for nearly twenty-five years after World War II. In the late 1960s, as the nation's economic growth slowed, the question of who should pay for higher education came under fresh political scrutiny. Decades-old no-tuition policies at the University of…
Descriptors: Tuition, Educational Finance, Politics of Education, Political Attitudes
Marili Alvarado – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This study examined Latinx and undocumented students' tuition assignment and financial aid packages at public colleges and universities across the United States of America. Descriptive non-experimental research design was used to test nine sets of hypotheses to answer three research questions on: the relationship between college tuition assignment…
Descriptors: Tuition, Student Financial Aid, State Policy, Hispanic American Students
Colleen Falkenstern – Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, 2024
The Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education (WICHE) annual survey of tuition and fees collects the resident and nonresident tuition and fees at public two- and four-year institutions in the WICHE region for undergraduate and graduate students. WICHE administered the most recent survey to state higher education executive offices, system…
Descriptors: Tuition, Student Financial Aid, Educational Trends, Public Colleges
Richard Scott Verzyl – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Institutional merit-based financial aid awards are widely utilized by enrollment management practitioners to attract and retain students desired by the institution and to increase net tuition revenue. While much research has been conducted on federal need-based aid and statewide merit aid, relatively few studies have been conducted on merit aid…
Descriptors: College Students, Control Groups, Merit Scholarships, Enrollment Influences
Education Commission of the States, 2020
The "50-State Comparison: State Policies on Postsecondary Tuition Setting, Capping and Freezing" details the highest level of policy, by state, that addresses the authority to set tuition for the four-year and two-year public sectors. This resource shows whether a state law, rule or regulation requires a tuition cap or freeze for…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Higher Education, Public Colleges, State Policy
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
Kara DeSanna – ProQuest LLC, 2021
The purpose of this case study is to understand higher education administrators' perceptions of New York State's tuition-free initiative, the Excelsior Scholarship. A comprehensive literature review offers insights into a select history of higher education policy, as well as the current condition of public higher education. Guided by a…
Descriptors: Scholarships, Administrator Attitudes, Higher Education, Tuition
Jack Mountjoy – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
This paper studies the causal impacts of public universities on the outcomes of their marginally admitted students. I use administrative admission records spanning all 35 public universities in Texas, which collectively enroll 10 percent of American public university students, to systematically identify and employ decentralized cutoffs in SAT/ACT…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Higher Education, Public Colleges, Universities
Larry Barker – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Tuition discounting has been a long-standing practice among colleges and universities. Its roots can be traced to the beginnings of the 1970s, and its use has continued to increase and expand in the decades following. However, despite its widespread use, the research is inconclusive whether tuition discounting has been an effective strategy to…
Descriptors: Universities, Colleges, Tuition, Student Costs
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Lee Mackenzie – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
This article draws on existing research, including publicly available data, to identify changes in Colombian HE which have led to its progressive massification and neoliberalisation. These include the introduction of standardised testing; endogenous and exogenous privatisation (Ball and Youdell, 2007); the expansion of the country's non-income…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Neoliberalism, Sustainable Development
Burland, Elizabeth; Dynarski, Susan; Michelmore, Katherine; Owen, Stephanie; Raghuraman, Swetha – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022
Proposed "free college" policies vary widely in design. The simplest set tuition to zero for everyone. More targeted approaches limit free tuition to those who demonstrate need through an application process. We experimentally test the effects of these two models on the schooling decisions of low-income students. An unconditional free…
Descriptors: Tuition, Paying for College, Access to Education, Models
Campaign for College Opportunity, 2022
California's public higher education system has catapulted the state into global leadership such that, the state is the 5th largest economy in the world today. A bachelor's degree, in particular, provides unrivaled economic and health benefits for the individual earning the degree and for the state. To better understand how California's public…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Public Colleges, Community Colleges, State Colleges
Harney, John O. – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2019
The 2019 "Education Next" Poll found 60% of Americans endorse the idea of making public four-year colleges free, and 69% want free public two-year colleges. There are also critics of free college schemes. They include some families who had to scrimp and save for their children to earn degrees. The "New England Journal of Higher…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Community Colleges, Tuition, Fees
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Harry Brighouse; Kailey Mullane – Educational Theory, 2023
Advocates of tuition-free four-year public college make the argument for it too easy by asserting that it would be paid for out of taxes on the wealthy. Other uses of the revenues are possible. In this paper, Harry Brighouse and Kailey Mullane establish two criteria for comparing different uses of the revenues: the first criterion is, will the…
Descriptors: Public Colleges, Educational Policy, Equal Education, Educational Finance
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Davis, Zachary G. – Education Economics, 2021
Public sector universities offer in-state and out-of-state students similar amounts of institutional aid per ACT point. Private universities, however, offer in-state students over 65% more aid per ACT point than out-of-state students. I develop a general equilibrium model to explain why private universities price discriminate in favor of in-state…
Descriptors: Tuition, In State Students, Private Colleges, Student Costs
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