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Colorado Department of Higher Education, 2022
House Bill 21-1010 tasked the Colorado Department of Higher Education (CDHE) and the Colorado Department of Education (CDE) to convene a workgroup dedicated to identifying obstacles to increasing the diversity of Colorado's educator workforce and to develop recommendations for meeting the challenge. This report is a result of the workgroup's…
Descriptors: Diversity (Faculty), Equal Education, Minority Group Teachers, Teacher Recruitment
Monica Ocampo – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The purpose of my phenomenological qualitative study was to understand the impact of family involvement and engagement on the persistence of first-generation Latinx students at a Hispanic-Serving Institution (HSI) designated university. Grounded in Yosso's (2005) community cultural wealth (CCW) model, I explored the ways CCW assets learned from…
Descriptors: Family Involvement, Academic Persistence, First Generation College Students, Hispanic American Students
Herlyne Jean – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Low student completion rates have increased pressure on college and university administrators across the country to raise retention and graduation rates and have forced the review of many practices on campus. This qualitative study aimed to examine the effects of financial aid on higher educational persistence among African American males.…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, College Students, African American Students, Males
Pew Charitable Trusts, 2020
In a 2019 poll conducted by the opinion and market research company SSRS for The Pew Charitable Trusts, 7 in 10 Americans said that taking out a student loan is a reasonable choice given the benefits of a college degree, but 89 percent also expressed concern about people's ability to repay those debts. Research has provided insight into the…
Descriptors: College Students, Paying for College, Student Financial Aid, Loan Repayment
Sallie Mae Bank, 2020
Sallie Mae partnered with Ipsos, a global independent market research company, to introduce a new 2020 study, "Higher Ambitions: How America Plans for Post-secondary Education." The study is designed to understand high school students' plans for after they graduate high school. In addition, it examines the value students and their…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, High School Students, Paying for College, Parent Attitudes
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Handel, Stephen J.; Strempel, Eileen – College and University, 2021
In 2008 it was certain that the Great Recession would represent--for this generation--the singular reordering of higher education. As a result, it was assumed that colleges and universities would be forced to become vastly more efficient places by graduating more students with high-value certificates and degrees. Despite significant cuts to higher…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Finance, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Billings, Meredith S.; Gándara, Denisa; Li, Amy Y. – New Directions for Community Colleges, 2021
Promise programs are an increasing popular solution to improving college affordability, reducing educational inequities, and promoting economic development. Promise programs are distinct from other forms of financial aid because they emphasize residency in their eligibility criteria, where students must live and/or attend school in specific…
Descriptors: Tuition Grants, Scholarship Funds, Eligibility, Place of Residence
Crandall-Hollick, Margot L. – Congressional Research Service, 2021
The federal government provides financial assistance to individuals for higher education expenses in two major ways: tax benefits and traditional student aid (loans, grants, and work-study assistance). Since 1997, education tax benefits have become an increasingly important component of federal higher education policy. In 2021, 11 higher…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Tax Credits, Federal Aid, Incentives
Bonikowska, Aneta; Frenette, Marc – Statistics Canada, 2021
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a rapid and substantial increase in unemployment and to uncertainty about future job prospects. Despite this increased uncertainty, parents' expectations that their children will pursue postsecondary studies remained high during the lockdown--91.7% of children whose parents were surveyed in May or June 2020 were…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Postsecondary Education, Parent Attitudes
Weinstein, Paul, Jr.; Goodman, Veronica – Progressive Policy Institute, 2021
Over the last 30 years, college tuition has skyrocketed. From 1988 to 2018, tuition at public four-year institutions rose 213%. In response to the exponential surge in the cost of higher education, policymakers have focused increasingly on proposals to expand financial aid and loans, and canceling the vast sums of debt that college students have…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Finance, Paying for College, Student Costs
Schak, J. Oliver; Wong, Nancy; Fung, Ana – Project on Student Debt, 2021
"Student Debt and the Class of 2020" is The Institute for College Access & Success' (TICAS') sixteenth annual report on the student loan debt of recent graduates from four-year colleges, documenting changes and variation in student debt across states and colleges. State averages for debt at graduation in 2020 ranged from $18,350…
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Student Financial Aid, COVID-19, Pandemics
Aucejo, Esteban M.; French, Jacob F.; Zafar, Basit – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2021
The college experience involves much more than credit hours and degrees. Students likely derive utility from in-person instruction and on-campus social activities. Quantitative measures of the value of these individual components have been hard to come by. Leveraging the COVID-19 shock, we elicit students' intended likelihood of enrolling in…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Experience, COVID-19, Pandemics
Ruth Delaney – ProQuest LLC, 2021
The United States has gone through two transformations in the meaning of higher education in prison and the value of access for people in prison in the last 50 years and is now moving towards a third. The establishment of Pell grants in 1972 allowed for widespread access to higher education in prison, while the removal of those grants in 1994…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Institutionalized Persons, Adult Education, Correctional Rehabilitation
Margaret W. Cahalan; Nicole Brunt; Terry Vaughan III; Erick Montenegro; Stephanie Breen; Esosa Ruffin; Laura W. Perna – Pell Institute for the Study of Opportunity in Higher Education, 2024
The theme of the Equity Indicators for 2024 is confronting the realities and exploring feasible solutions related to the paradoxical and unequal higher education system. As the figure shows, higher education in the United States is increasingly the major agent of overcoming poverty and of attaining upward mobility toward the so-called…
Descriptors: Educational Indicators, Higher Education, Educational Trends, Equal Education
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Erin L. Castro; Caisa E. Royer; Amy E. Lerman; Mary R. Gould – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2024
This research considers Pell grant restoration for incarcerated people for the field of higher education in prison. Using the original data, we outline the limits of Pell funding in the prison context by surfacing persistent funding challenges that the Pell grant alone cannot address and may exacerbate. By providing the necessary investments to…
Descriptors: Federal Aid, Grants, Rehabilitation, Institutionalized Persons
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