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Ehrmann, Stephen C. – Liberal Education, 2021
American colleges and universities need to ensure that the students of today and the future receive better career preparation than they are currently getting: only six in ten employers say that recent graduates have the capabilities needed to succeed in entry-level roles, according to the Association of American Colleges and Universities' 2021…
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Educational Quality, Access to Education, Paying for College
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Zhu, Qiong; Choi, Junghee; Meng, Yi – Research in Higher Education, 2021
To improve college access for low-income students, an increasing number of public colleges and universities have implemented no-loan policies, where student loans are replaced with institutional grant aid that does not require repayment. Using detailed income measures provided by Mobility Report Card data, this study examines the effect of no-loan…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Low Income Students, Access to Education, Paying for College
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Andrews, Benjamin D. – Research in Higher Education, 2021
Since the turn of the twenty-first century, going to college has become increasingly financially difficult in the United States. Tuition prices continued to rise, state funding for higher education declined, and the mean family income declined or stagnated for all but the top 20 percent of families (Goldrick-Rab 2016). In a period where college…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Student Costs, Credit (Finance), Longitudinal Studies
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Andrews, Benjamin D. – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2021
While the majority of college students use credit cards for educational expenses like textbooks, recent data reports that college students also use credit cards to directly fund their schooling by charging for at least some part of their tuition (Sallie Mae, 2009). Because credit cards carry a higher interest rate than student loans, and because…
Descriptors: College Students, Paying for College, Credit (Finance), Tuition
National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, 2021
The Pell Grant is the cornerstone of the federal student aid programs, providing need-based grant aid to the country's lowest-income postsecondary students. Pell Grants have failed for decades to keep pace with increased college costs and inflation. Doubling the maximum Pell Grant to $13,000 will effectively recalibrate the grant and restore its…
Descriptors: Federal Aid, Grants, Student Financial Aid, Low Income Students
Odle, Taylor K.; Lee, Jason C.; Gentile, Steven P. – Grantee Submission, 2021
As college promise programs proliferate across the United States with noted intentions to promote access through increased affordability, it is necessary to understand the relationship between these programs and other forms of financial aid, including loans. Using federal, state, and program-level data, we leverage a natural experiment to estimate…
Descriptors: State Programs, Paying for College, Student Loan Programs, Student Financial Aid
Kennan Cepa – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Funding children's college expenses can be a family project, often requiring substantial savings from parents and educational debt from children, but parents also borrow to support their children's postsecondary ambitions. Despite growing use of debt to finance children's college expenses, studies have overlooked parent borrowing's role in…
Descriptors: Parent Aspiration, Student Loan Programs, Paying for College, Loan Repayment
Monnica Chan – ProQuest LLC, 2021
College tuition and fee rates have risen dramatically over the last twenty years. Grant aid dollars, however, have increased at a slower rate, especially at public four-year institutions, which were twice as expensive in AY2018-19 compared to AY1998-1999 (Ma, Baum, Pender & Libassi, 2018). How do students pay for college when grant aid is not…
Descriptors: Student Employment, Paying for College, Tuition, Costs
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Zhang, Hanwen – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2023
As China moved from elite to mass higher education, student borrowers as the product of state intervention have surged. Yet little attention has been paid to their voices. This study conducts reflexive thematic analysis with a qualitative inquiry into lived experiences of 41 current borrowers. A five-factor typology of debt attitudes yields a…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Classification, Debt (Financial), Student Attitudes
Weir, Cate; Boyle, M. – Institute for Community Inclusion, 2023
This Insight Brief discusses how students with intellectual disability can utilize federal financial aid to help pay for college. This publication is updated annually to reflect current legislation and policy related to federal financial aid for students with intellectual disabilities. The information provided is current as of January 2023.
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Students with Disabilities, Intellectual Disability, Federal Aid
Laderman, Sophia – ProQuest LLC, 2023
States founded, control, and fund public postsecondary institutions because higher education helps meet state goals. Public institutions of higher education provide considerable public benefits to states, but these benefits have not been systematically measured. As a result, public conversations about the broad value proposition of higher…
Descriptors: State Policy, Educational Policy, Educational Objectives, Public Colleges
Johnson Urrutia, Esperanza – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This dissertation presents evidence about implementing a free college policy on higher education's demand and supply. This analysis includes descriptive evidence about the impact of the policy on students and programs' behavior. It also develops and estimates a demand and supply model of higher education that provides a framework to analyze the…
Descriptors: Economics, Economic Factors, Higher Education, Educational Policy
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
Pingel, Sarah – ITHAKA S+R, 2022
Nationally, Ithaka S+R estimates that over six million students have completed credits at postsecondary institutions that they cannot document due to a past due balance. These overdue balances contribute to a national problem of stranded credits--credits that students have completed but cannot document because they were unable to fulfill their…
Descriptors: College Credits, Debt (Financial), Academic Records, Paying for College
Crandall-Hollick, Margot L.; McDermott, Brendan – Congressional Research Service, 2022
Since 1997, education tax benefits have become an increasingly important component of federal higher education policy. For 2023, 11 higher education-related tax benefits are available. After 2025, absent legislative action, this number will effectively increase to 13. Two provisions that are temporarily suspended are scheduled to be…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Tax Credits, Federal Aid, Incentives
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