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Eric R. Felix; Denisa Gándara; Sosanya Jones – Teachers College Record, 2024
Background: Nearly two decades have passed since the last successful reauthorization of the Higher Education Act. Since then, student loan debt and the accumulation patterns based on race have become a pressing issue to address in U.S. society. Purpose: Student debt is one of the key issues on the federal higher education policy agenda. The…
Descriptors: Race, Debt (Financial), Educational Policy, Higher Education
Washington Student Achievement Council, 2024
In 2013, the Washington Student Achievement Council (WSAC) proposed as the state goal that 70 percent of the state's 25- to 44-year-olds (i.e., early and mid-career residents) should have a credential beyond high school. WSAC's Strategic Action Plan (SAP) provides a framework to organize the policy and practice innovation needed to achieve this…
Descriptors: Strategic Planning, Equal Education, Race, Paying for College
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Guth, Douglas J. – Community College Journal, 2021
States are coordinating with two-year institutions on workforce programming for unemployed or underemployed residents. Reskilling residents is especially vital for states that endured historic unemployment rates as a result of COVID-19-related layoffs. Nationally, the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES) is making…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, State Policy, Program Implementation, Grants
Zaloom, Caitlin M. – American Educator, 2021
Pursuing a college degree--and the open future for young adults it is believed to secure--anchors what it means to be middle class in the United States today. Acting on the conviction that the rising generation can and should do better than their parents is a middle-class inheritance, and getting young adults to and through college is at the heart…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Social Responsibility, Middle Class, Family Involvement
Menjou, Mindy; Bednarczuk, Michael; Hunter, Amy – Institute for Justice, 2021
Cosmetology is one of the most widely and onerously regulated occupations for lower-income workers, yet little research has explored the experiences of aspiring beauty workers. This first-of-its-kind study takes advantage of federal educational data--including a large, and largely untapped, dataset on nondegree credentials and work experience…
Descriptors: Cosmetology, Certification, Dropouts, Debt (Financial)
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Collier, Daniel A.; Fitzpatrick, Dan; Marsicano, Christopher R. – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2021
We update Collier et al. (2021) by using the Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) 2019 dataset to explore characteristics of enrollees in Income-Driven Repayment (IDR). SCF 2019 is more likely to include borrowers engaged in REPAYE. Findings support an ongoing need to encourage greater IDR participation for lowest-income borrowers and reinforced…
Descriptors: Loan Repayment, Income, Low Income Students, College Students
Kurtz, Holly; Lloyd, Sterling; Harwin, Alex; Chen, Victor; Gubbay, Natalie – Editorial Projects in Education, 2021
In August and September of 2021, the EdWeek Research Center surveyed nearly 1,500 high-achieving high school graduates from the Class of 2021 to assess the pandemic's impact on their high school experiences and post-high school plans. The nationally representative survey found that 2021 graduates saw heightened stress along with financial hardship…
Descriptors: High Achievement, Low Income Students, COVID-19, Pandemics
Emrey-Arras, Melissa – US Government Accountability Office, 2021
When a college closes, it can derail the education of many students, leaving them with loans but no degree. Those who cannot complete their education may be eligible to have their federal student loans forgiven through a "closed school discharge" from the Department of Education (Education), but this process has changed in recent years.…
Descriptors: Colleges, School Closing, Paying for College, Student Loan Programs
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Ringo, Daniel – Education Finance and Policy, 2019
Parents in the United States frequently supplement the student loans available to their children by cosigning on a loan, borrowing against their home equity, or with unsecured debt in their own names. This paper investigates whether some students are constrained from attending and completing college by their parents' lack of access to credit…
Descriptors: Credit (Finance), College Attendance, Educational Attainment, Parent Child Relationship
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Kelchen, Robert – Teachers College Record, 2019
Background/Context: Public colleges and universities have sought to recruit and enroll more students from outside their home state in an effort to both enhance institutional prestige and generate additional revenue from the higher tuition rates than nonresident students generally pay. A body of research has shown that nonresident students tend to…
Descriptors: College Students, Out of State Students, Public Colleges, Tuition
Ross, Craig Morgan – ProQuest LLC, 2019
The price of a college education has consistently risen at a rate exceeding inflation. The price increases have strained students and their families paying for college. In addition, the manner in which colleges increase their prices can vary widely from year to year, making it difficult to plan for the increases in college expenses. In 2011, New…
Descriptors: State Universities, Tuition, Paying for College, Enrollment
Cervone, Ed – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2020
In October 2019, New England Board of Higher Education (NEBHE) called together a group of economists and higher education leaders for a meeting at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston to discuss the future of higher education ("Preparing for Another Recession?"). No one suspected that just months later, a global pandemic would turn the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Pandemics, COVID-19, Enrollment Trends
Rosenberg, Brian – Harvard Education Press, 2023
In "Whatever It Is, I'm Against It," president emeritus of Macalester College Brian Rosenberg draws on decades of higher education experience to expose the entrenched structures, practices, and cultures that inhibit meaningful postsecondary reform, even as institutions face serious challenges to their financial and educational models. A…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Change, Resistance to Change, Barriers
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Spica, Elizabeth – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2023
In response to the high cost of textbooks and other course materials, "Inclusive Access" automatic billing programs allow the cost of a discounted eTextbook and/or courseware to be automatically added to a student's tuition bill at the time of course registration. Touted for their ability to lower costs and provide students with access…
Descriptors: Electronic Publishing, Textbooks, Costs, Courseware
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Kuperberg, Arielle – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2023
Students' access to family help with paying for college tuition and living expenses varies by family resources, structures, and relationships, and can affect later outcomes and the extent to which students rely on various forms of financial aid. This study analyzes an originally collected dataset at two regional public four-year universities in…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Family Structure, Family Influence, Family Characteristics
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