ERIC Number: ED491719
Record Type: Non-Journal
Publication Date: 2006-May
Pages: 43
Abstractor: ERIC
Reference Count: 23
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: N/A
Paying for Persistence. Early Results of a Louisiana Scholarship Program for Low-Income Parents Attending Community College
Brock, Thomas; Richburg-Hayes, Lashawn
MDRC
Community colleges, which tend to be more accessible and affordable than other postsecondary institutions, are a critical resource for low-income people striving to improve their prospects in the labor market and in life. Yet nearly half of students who begin at community colleges leave school before receiving a credential. Research by MDRC and others suggests that many community college students want to earn a degree but are overwhelmed by the competing demands of work, family, and school. Institutional barriers, such as poorly tailored instruction, insufficient financial aid, or inadequate advising, may also impede their academic progress. In 2003, MDRC launched the Opening Doors demonstration project to study the effects of innovative programs designed to help students stay in school and succeed. Six colleges in four states are taking part in the demonstration. This report presents early findings from Louisiana Opening Doors, an enhanced financial aid program targeting low-income parents at two community colleges in the New Orleans area: Delgado Community College and Louisiana Technical College-West Jefferson. This program was designed to help students with their expenses and provide an incentive to make good academic progress. Students randomly assigned to Opening Doors were offered a $1,000 scholarship for each of two semesters, in addition to the regular financial aid they qualified for, if they enrolled at least half time and earned at least a C average. They also received enhanced counseling. Students in a control group received only regular financial aid and the counseling available to all students. The early findings in Louisiana are compelling and suggest that a performance-based scholarship can indeed have a positive effect on persistence and academic achievement among a student population that faces multiple barriers to completing college. The students in Opening Doors were more likely to enroll in college full time, passed more courses, earned more course credits, and had higher rates of persistence. (Contains 30 endnotes, 3 tables, and 1 figure.) [The opening Doors Project was also funded by MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Socioeconomic Status and Health; MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Transitions to Adulthood.]
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Scholarships, Low Income Groups, Parents, College Students, Student Financial Aid, Counseling, Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, Student Characteristics
MDRC, 16 East 34th Street, 19th Floor, New York, NY 10016-4326. Tel: 212-532-3200; Fax: 212-684-0832; e-mail: publications@mdrc.org.
Publication Type: Information Analyses; Numerical/Quantitative Data; Reports - Research
Education Level: Postsecondary Education; Two Year Colleges
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, Flint, MI.; Annie E. Casey Foundation, Greenwich, CT.; Ford Foundation, New York, NY.; George Gund Foundation, Cleveland, OH.; James G. Irvine Foundation, San Francisco, CA.; Joyce Foundation, Chicago, IL.; KnowledgeWorks Foundation, Cincinnati, OH.; Lumina Foundation for Education, Indianapolis, IN.; National Inst. of Child Health and Human Development (NIH), Bethesda, MD.; Princeton Univ., NJ. Industrial Relations Section.; Robin Hood Foundation, New York, NY.; Spencer Foundation, Chicago, IL.; Department of Education, Washington, DC.; Department of Labor, Washington, DC.; William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, Palo Alto, CA.; William T. Grant Foundation, New York, NY.
Authoring Institution: Manpower Demonstration Research Corp., New York, NY.
Identifiers: Louisiana


