1,999 results on '"scholarships"'
Search Results
2. Increasing Access to High-Demand Occupational Training: An Exploration of G3's Recruitment and Enrollment Strategies. ARCC Network Brief
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Community College Research Center (CCRC), Accelerating Recovery in Community Colleges (ARCC) Network, Maria Cormier, Richard Kazis, Nikki Edgecombe, and Myci Atkinson
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Get A Skill, Get A Job, Get Ahead (G3) is a state-funded last-dollar scholarship program for students enrolling in eligible associate degree, certificate, and noncredit occupational training programs in the Virginia Community College System (VCCS) in five high-demand fields: early childhood education, healthcare, information technology, public safety, and skilled trades (construction and manufacturing). Launched in the 2021-22 academic year, the G3 initiative aims to increase enrollment, persistence, completion, and labor market success for low-to-middle-income learners. G3 has evolved over the past two years along with VCCS priorities to include a specific focus on boosting college enrollment and success of adult, Black and Hispanic, and low-income learners. In this brief, the authors highlight early insights from a study of G3 implementation and outcomes. Early analysis by VCCS shows that colleges are making progress in increasing enrollment in the five high-demand fields listed above. The authors draw on published enrollment and outcome data from VCCS and interview data collected from eight of the 23 community colleges implementing the G3 program to examine college-level G3 outreach, recruitment, and enrollment strategies and the process for awarding G3 aid.
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- 2024
3. Helping Families Navigate the Changing Education Landscape. Policy Analysis. Number 976
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Cato Institute, Colleen Hroncich, and Jamie Buckland
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Unlike vouchers and tax credit scholarships that do not allow parents to customize their children's education, Education savings accounts (ESAs) provide funding to pay for part-time classes at public and private schools, tutoring, curricula, services for special needs, and more. As navigating the opportunities that come with ESAs can be difficult, there is a growing movement to include "choice navigators" as an eligible expense in ESA programs, which can inform parents what educational opportunities are available and help tailor an education program for their children. This paper examines several key elements, including determining the types of navigation services that parents need in the changing education landscape; identifying best practices that states can adopt to simplify ESA navigation; tapping into the experiences of current ESA users and traditional homeschoolers; and deciding whether there are policies that can encourage an adequate supply of navigators without creating counterproductive rules.
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- 2024
4. 'For the Good of the City': An Early Evaluation of the Catto Scholarship
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Research for Action (RFA)
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The Octavius V. Catto Scholarship launched in spring 2021 at Community College of Philadelphia (CCP) to help Philadelphians achieve college success. Inspired by 19th-century civil rights leader Octavius Catto's belief in education for all, the scholarship goes beyond tuition assistance, providing wraparound supports including academic coaching, monthly direct payments, bookstore credits, and referrals to community resources. This initiative, created by former Mayor Jim Kenney, aims to combat poverty by making college more accessible and affordable. RFA conducted a mixed-methods evaluation of the Catto Scholarship aimed at identifying early successes and recommending areas for improvement. The report highlights the role of Success Coaches and other staff in building meaningful connections with Scholars and supporting them in overcoming barriers to retention and completion. The evaluation also presents findings suggesting that persistence and completion are higher among Catto Scholars than non-Catto CCP peers. The report emphasizes the importance of dedicated resources and staff in sustaining the scholarship's success. Recommendations from the evaluation include enhancing support for staff to prevent burnout, creating more community-building opportunities for scholars, and building additional community partnerships to support housing, mental health, transportation, and childcare needs.
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- 2024
5. What Is a College 'Promise' Program? The Creation and Transformation of a Concept, 2005-2022. EdWorkingPaper No. 24-985
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, David B. Monaghan, Crystal Almanzar, Madison Laughman, and Allyson Ritchey
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Promise programs are discussed as a policy movement that began with the 2005 launch of the Kalamazoo Promise. Since then, programs bearing the Promise label or sharing similar features have spread across the higher educational landscape, appearing in most states and across postsecondary sectors. Simultaneously, scholarly literature discussing these programs has burgeoned. And yet, scholars and others are unable to formulate a clear conception of what a Promise program is and what if anything sets such a program apart from other scholarship programs (e.g., state need-based grants). In this paper, we examine how scholars have discussed these programs over time. We begin with the initial theorization of the Kalamazoo Promise as a case and observe its use as a prototype in the formulation of a general model once "Promise program" was established as a category. We follow how the spread and transformation of "Promise programs" was reflected in repeated partial reconceptualization. We find three competing conceptual models emerging in sequence: 1) a thick, place-based causal model derived as a generalization of the Kalamazoo Promise, 2) a thin empirical model crafted in the aftermath of the launch of the Tennessee Promise, and 3) a partially acknowledged minimal or symbolic model advanced haltingly in response to critiques of last-dollar community college state programs. Scholarly conceptualization is largely reactive to empirical program diffusion and transformation, though scholarly idealization may have played a role in this diffusion itself.
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- 2024
6. Exploring the Relationship between Test-Optional Admissions and Selectivity and Enrollment Outcomes during the Pandemic. EdWorkingPaper No. 24-982
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, Kelly Rosinger, Dominique J. Baker, Joseph Sturm, Wan Yu, Julie J. Park, OiYan Poon, Brian Heseung Kim, and Stephanie Breen
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Most selective colleges implemented test-optional admissions during the pandemic, making college entrance exam scores optional for applicants. We draw on descriptive, two-way fixed effects, and event study methods to examine variation in test-optional implementation during the pandemic and how implementation relates to selectivity and enrollment. For "test-optional" colleges during the pandemic, we found substantial variation in policy type (e.g., test optional, test free) and whether the policy extended to all applicants and scholarship consideration. Findings suggest test-optional implementation related to increases in Black student enrollment, mostly at moderately selective colleges and when policies extended to all applicants and scholarships. At highly selective colleges, findings suggest test-optional implementation related to an increase in applications but not consistent gains in enrollment.
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- 2024
7. Pennsylvania's Track Record on Private School Vouchers: Still No Accountability
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Keystone Research Center (KRC), Diana Polson, Rachel Tabachnick, and Stephen Herzenberg
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Decades of chronic underfunding and inequitable funding have been spiraling Pennsylvania's public school system into crisis--failing kids and threatening the future of the Commonwealth. The Commonwealth Court has ruled that the state's current funding system for K-12 schools is unconstitutional and the state must take action to adequately and equitably fund schools. This report provides a cautionary tale for those considering expanding existing taxpayer-funded vouchers to attend private schools in Pennsylvania or creating a new program. Pennsylvania does not need to rely only on evidence from other states in evaluating whether to establish a new taxpayer-funded school voucher program. The reason: Pennsylvania already has two existing voucher programs now funded for a combined $470 million per year, over four times more than in 2012-13, the first year of the Opportunity Scholarship Tax Credit (OSTC) program, the newer of the two new voucher programs. The legislature first provided funds for the Educational Improvement Tax Credit (EITC) program in 2001-02. This report updates a 2017 Keystone Research Center report on these two existing voucher programs, which have received about $2.6 billion in state tax credits since their inception. This report finds: (1) All students in the state do not benefit equally from Pennsylvania's voucher program--students in rural communities often don't have access and participating schools are allowed to, and do, discriminate against students; (2) By design, neither the EITC nor OSTC program requires meaningful educational or financial accountability; Scholarship organizations and schools have few reporting requirements, making it difficult to assess impact or program compliance; (3) The EITC/OSTC programs are subsidizing religious schools that have few state-required standards regarding curriculum. Some of these schools receiving public money teach creationism as science and present the Bible as factually accurate history; and (4) PA's existing voucher program subsidizes the state's most elite and expensive private schools, as well as affluent families. The inadequate accountability in Pennsylvania's $470 million OSTC and EITC programs (for 2023-24) makes clear that the state should not divert more taxpayer dollars to these programs or create a new one. At minimum, a comprehensive financial and educational audit of these programs must be done first, including to evaluate curricula schools use and make recommendations regarding basic curriculum standards. The Independent Fiscal Office (IFO) attempted to evaluate the effectiveness of these programs and reported that, due to a lack of reporting requirements, it could not do so. Pennsylvania should also prioritize fully and fairly funding public schools, which serve all of Pennsylvania's students. A public dollar spent on expanding existing or creating new voucher programs in Pennsylvania is a dollar less that can be spent to meet the court-ordered mandate to fix the unconstitutional public school funding system.
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- 2024
8. College Athletics: Education Should Improve Its Title IX Enforcement Efforts. Report to Congressional Requesters. GAO-24-105994
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US Government Accountability Office (GAO) and Melissa Emrey-Arras
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Title IX prohibits sex discrimination in educational programs that receive federal financial assistance, including college athletics programs. Education's Office for Civil Rights (OCR) is responsible for enforcing Title IX by investigating complaints, negotiating agreements with colleges to address concerns, and monitoring agreements. US Government Accountability Office (GAO) was asked to review opportunities for women college athletes. This report examines (1) college athletic opportunities for women and (2) the extent to which Education oversees compliance with Title IX college athletics requirements. GAO analyzed the most recent available Education data reported by colleges for academic year 2021-2022 and analyzed OCR case management data for academic years 2008-2009 through 2021-2022, the most recent data available. GAO reviewed documentation for a nongeneralizable sample of 26 of 79 publicly available OCR athletics cases, selected to include a variety of athletics issues. GAO also interviewed Education officials and college athletic stakeholder groups, and reviewed federal laws and regulations.
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- 2024
9. Understanding the Cost of Universal School Vouchers: An Analysis of Arizona's Empowerment Scholarship Account Program
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Learning Policy Institute, Michael Griffith, and Dion Burns
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In the 2022-23 school year, Arizona began implementation of a "universal voucher" program through which all school-age students are eligible for a voucher, and families can use public funding to underwrite private or homeschool education for their children. Universal vouchers in Arizona are an expansion of the existing Empowerment Scholarship Account (ESA) program, which was targeted to students with special education needs or in specific circumstances. To better understand this program's impact on Arizona public schools, this report undertook a financial review of the expanded Arizona ESA program using publicly available data from the state budget, which details total state expenditures and student enrollment; Arizona Department of Education (ADE) quarterly reports to the State Board of Education, which detail the number of ESA applications received, approved, and denied; and ADE enrollment figures. The authors analyzed student enrollment in the program, the combined cost of the earlier enacted ESA program and the new universal voucher program, and their effects on education funding in the state. This report outlines the cost estimates and calculations in detail.
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- 2024
10. 2024 Affordability Report
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North Dakota University System, Brenda Zastoupil, and Jamie Wilke
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College affordability is a significant factor in student access, retention, and completion. Tuition and fee rates are a component of affordability, as is the availability of financial aid programs from federal, state, institutional and private sources, among other factors. Strategically designed approaches to college affordability can better assist students in preparing for post-secondary education, accessing programs, and degree persistence. This report outlines key affordability factors within the North Dakota University System (NDUS) by focusing on student costs, net price, and availability of financial aid. This report includes regional comparisons, which include peer institutions from Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. The comparison states include continental U.S. Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education (WICHE) states, plus contiguous states. This 2024 affordability report looks at the following numerical data for higher education in the state of North Dakota: (1) Tuition, Mandatory Fees, Housing and Food; (2) Cost of Attendance; (3) Net Price; (4) Financial Aid Overview; (5) Federal Financial Aid; (6) Annual Student Loan Disbursements; (7) Indebtedness at Graduation; (8) 2022-23 Undergraduate Grants, Scholarships and Waivers; (9) 2022-23 Undergraduate Total Financial Aid Disbursements and % of Cost Covered; (10) State Financial Aid Programs and Appropriation; and (11) Other Sources.
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- 2024
11. Higher Education: VA Should Provide Additional Information to Its Staff and Schools on the Rogers STEM Scholarship. Report to Congressional Committees. GAO-24-106492
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US Government Accountability Office (GAO) and Melissa Emrey-Arras
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Veterans who received technical training in the military may be well suited to pursue degrees in STEM. The Edith Nourse Rogers STEM Scholarship provides up to $30,000 to assist veterans with continuing qualifying STEM programs after they exhaust their Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits. The Harry W. Colmery Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2017 includes a provision for the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to provide an interim and final assessment of the Rogers STEM scholarship program. This final assessment: (1) reports the number of veterans that pursued and obtained STEM degrees using the Rogers STEM scholarship; and (2) evaluates how consistently VA processes Rogers STEM scholarship applications. GAO analyzed VA administrative data from August 2019 to June 2023, the most recently available data at the time of GAO's analysis. GAO also held four discussion groups with VA staff who process scholarship applications and reviewed relevant VA documents.
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- 2024
12. Alaska Performance Scholarship Outcomes Report, 2024. Fall 2021-2023
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Alaska Commission on Postsecondary Education (ACPE), Alaska Department of Education and Early Development (DEED), Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development (DOLWD), and University of Alaska
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The Alaska Performance Scholarship (APS) rewards students who strive to excel in high school and continue their education in degree and certificate programs in Alaska. This report covers the high school, postsecondary, Alaska residency, and workforce outcomes of the APS program between Fall 2011-2023. [This report was prepared by Resource Data, Inc.]
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- 2024
13. How America Pays for College, 2024: Sallie Mae's National Study of College Students and Parents
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Sallie Mae Bank and Ipsos
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The report examines how enrolled undergraduate students and parents of undergraduates view higher education and how they pay for it. The report considers education funding sources--from parent and student income and savings to scholarships, grants, and borrowed funds--and evaluates trends in payment strategies over time. This 17th edition provides insights into families' experience with the financial aid process, including researching and applying for scholarships, completing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA®), and understanding financial aid award offers from colleges and universities. This year's report also explores how students attending Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) approach higher education financing. The research was conducted between April 8, 2024 and May 14, 2024. Dollar and proportional amounts in this report are averages that reflect composite representations intended to illustrate how the "typical" family paid for college. The composite is a computed formula that spreads individual responses across all survey respondents. The geographic regions discussed mirror those used by the U.S. Census Bureau.
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- 2024
14. School Choice: Expanding Educational Freedom for All. Hearing before the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, Secondary Education of the Committee on Education and the Workforce. U.S. House of Representatives, One Hundred Eighteenth Congress, First Session (April 18, 2023). Serial No. 118-5
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US House of Representatives. Committee on Education and the Workforce, Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, Secondary Education
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This document records testimony from a hearing before the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, Secondary Education of the Committee on Education and the Workforce that was held to examine school choice. Opening statements were provided by: (1) Honorable Aaron Bean, Chairman, Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education; and (2) Honorable Suzanne Bonamici, Ranking Member, Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Witness statements were provided by: (1) Honorable Warren Davidson, a Representative in Congress from the State of Ohio; (2) Honorable Mark Pocan, a Representative in Congress from the State of Wisconsin; (3) Adrian Smith, Former Member of Congress, Nebraska; (4) Luke Messer, Former Member of Congress, President, Invest in Education; (5) Derek Black, Professor of Law and Ernest F. Holdings Chair in Constitutional Law, University of South Carolina; (6) Denisha Allen, Senior Fellow, American Federation for Children; and (7) Lindsey Burke, Director of the Center for Education Policy, Heritage Foundation. Additional submissions include: (1) Ranking Member Bonamici: (a) Letter dated April 18, 2023, from the National Coalition for Public Education; and (b) Letter dated April 25, 2023, from the National Parent Teacher Association; and (2) Honorable Rau'l Grijalva, a Representative in Congress from the State of Arizona: Statement for the record submitted by Rau'l M. Grijalva.
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- 2024
15. Grace under Pressure: Unmasking the Accounts of Consistency of President's Listers
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Jonelson C. Escandallo, Kristy Jane R. Muegna, and Deveyvon L. Espinosa
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Being recognized as one of the President's Lister (PL) in an academic institution reflects one specific student's dedication, intelligence, and hard work. Therefore, this research investigated and revealed the real-life experiences of students who achieved President's List status as they endeavored to maintain consistency amidst the challenges posed by the pandemic. This phenomenological research comprised 10 participants, evenly distributed between in-depth interviews (IDI) and focus group discussions (FGD). These individuals were exclusively selected from Kapalong College of Agriculture, Sciences, and Technology, all of whom were consistent President's List (PL) students enrolled in the Institute of Teacher Education (ITEd), specifically third-year and fourth-year students. The collected data underwent analysis through coding and thematic analysis. The findings of the study delineated varied experiences, coping mechanisms, strategies, and perspectives of the chosen PL students regarding their pursuit of consistency amidst the pandemic. Lastly, the findings and results of the study are deemed essential and beneficial to the field of education, especially in all Higher Education Institutions (HEIs), as this may serve as their basis for crafting guidelines and policies like special scholarships to these honour students in support to their consistency with their academic pursuit. The results could also provide valuable insights to the Commission on Higher Education for formulating a memorandum and updating the Program Standard and Guidelines, particularly in implementing a flexible learning approach while taking into account the preparedness of both students and educators.
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- 2024
16. Between 'Scylla and Charybdis'? Trusteeship, Africa-China Relations, and Education Policy and Practice
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Obed Mfum-Mensah
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Sub-Saharan African societies had contacts with China that stretch back to the early days of the Silk Road where the two regions facilitated trade relations and exchanged technology and ideas. Beginning in the 1950s China formalized relations with SSA based on South-South cooperation. At the end of the Cold War, China intensified its relations with SSA within the frameworks of "One Belt one Road" in Africa and the Forum for China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC). The China-Africa relations have scored benefits in the areas of promoting infrastructural development, strong investments in SSA, trade links between the two regions, less expensive technical assistance for nations in SSA, cultural exchanges, and student scholarships. Nonetheless, the relations raise complicated issues around trade where China is flooding markets in SSA with inferior goods, acquisition of resources, Chinese mining companies causing environmental destruction in many countries in SSA, and the Chinese government's debt trapping of many sub-Saharan African nations. Many suspect that China is surreptitiously forging a relationship with SSA that may help it assert its "trusteeship" over sub-Saharan Africa's political, economic, and development processes. The paper is developed within these broader contexts to examine the paradoxes and contradictions of the China-sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) relations and their potential impacts on education policy and practice in the region. The paper focuses on SSA, a region that constitutes forty-eight of the fifty-four countries of the African continent. This sociohistorical paper is part of my ongoing study to examine the impacts of external forces' economic and political relations on education policy and practice in the SSA and the potential of the relations to destabilize the epistemological processes of sub-Saharan African societies. [For the complete Volume 22 proceedings, see ED656158.]
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- 2024
17. Unblocking the Pipeline: Supporting the Retention, Progression and Promotion of Black Early-Career Academics. HEPI Report 176
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Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) (United Kingdom), Becca Franssen, Josh Freeman, Opeoluwa Aiyenitaju, Bola Babajide, Mercy Denedo, Steven Kator Iorfa, and Adegboyega Oyedijo
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In recent years the UK higher education sector has made great progress increasing the representation of Black academics, but more work is needed so every early-career academic has equal opportunity to develop their career. In this report, Dr. Becca Franssen and colleagues draw on survey results and in-depth interviews to paint a picture of the experiences of Black early-career academics and develop a practical guide for how higher education institutions can work purposefully in this area. [The report was coproduced with GatenbySanderson and the Society of Black Academics.]
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- 2024
18. Examining the Impact, Implementation, and Cost Effectiveness of Completion Coaching in a Statewide College Promise Program. Final Evaluation Report
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Research for Action (RFA), Dae Y. Kim, and Karin Gegenheimer
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In 2015, Tennessee launched Tennessee Promise (TN Promise), one of the most comprehensive and well-funded statewide free-college scholarship programs in the country. To support TN Promise students, and especially those from the lowest-income households, tnAchieves, a key partner facilitating all non-financial components of TN Promise, implemented completion coaching across the state's 13 community colleges beginning in fall 2018. In partnership with tnAchieves, Research for Action (RFA) conducted a three-year mixed methods study to evaluate tnAchieves' completion coaching program, focusing on the relative effectiveness of proactive versus reactive coaching. The study included four parts: (1) an analysis of impact on student outcomes; (2) an implementation study; (3) an exploratory study of dosage effects; and (4) a cost analysis. The impact study used a randomized control trial (RCT) design that randomly assigned the fall 2019 Promise cohort to proactive or reactive coaching conditions. In this report, study findings are summarized and implications for program and policy development are discussed. The study contributes valuable insights to the field of college coaching and TN Promise programs, shedding light on the effectiveness of such programs in supporting students from low-income backgrounds.
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- 2023
19. Digital SAT® Pilot Predictive Validity Study -- A Comprehensive Analysis of First-Year College Outcomes
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College Board, Westrick, Paul A., Marini, Jessica P., Young, Linda, Ng, Helen, and Shaw, Emily J.
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This pilot study examines digital SAT® score relationships with first-year college performance. Results show that digital SAT scores predict college performance as well as paper and pencil SAT scores, and that digital SAT scores meaningfully improve our understanding of a student's readiness for college above high school grade point average (HSGPA) alone. In this study, there was a 22% improvement in the prediction of college performance when the SAT and HSGPA were used together, instead of using the HSGPA alone. For STEM majors, the added SAT value was 38%. Similar results were found when the outcome examined was course credits earned in the first year, a metric for understanding student progress toward degree completion. Findings from this study show that the SAT remains a powerful tool for understanding students' readiness for college, for course placement and academic major field decisions, scholarship and honors program decisions, and identifying students who may need academic support.
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- 2023
20. Tennessee Higher Education Fact Book: 2022-2023
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Tennessee Higher Education Commission, Tennessee Student Assistance Corporation (THEC/TSAC)
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This year's "Tennessee Higher Education Fact Book" consists of four sections and an appendix of additional resources and terminology. The four main sections of the report provide data on Student Participation, Student Success, Academic and Fiscal Trends, and Outcomes-Based Funding. Relative to the previous Fact Book, Quality Assurance Funding (QAF) data are no longer presented in a standalone section of the Fact Book. QAF data are still reported in the Fact Book and may be found within the Student Success, Academic and Fiscal Trends, and Outcomes-Based Funding sections. Complementing this report, an online dashboard provides a by-institution snapshot of fall 2022 enrollment and academic year 2021-22 degree completion data (representing summer 2021, fall 2021, and spring 2022). New this year, data downloads are available to make the information presented within the report more accessible and useable to readers. Enrollment and degree completion data for Tennessee's newest public institution, the University of Tennessee Southern, are presented in a separate report supplement available via the Fact Book landing page. The 2022-23 Fact Book was originally published in early June 2023. Following its initial release, THEC staff received additional data on TCAT outcomes, expanded data reporting on academic majors, and corrected errors and clarified content related to College Scorecard data reporting. [For the report supplement, see ED631768. For the 2021-2022 Fact Book, see ED624464.]
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- 2023
21. 2019-20 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS:20) First Look at Student Financial Aid Estimates for 2019-20. Supplemental Tables, by Institution State. NCES 2023-466
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National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) (ED/IES), RTI International, Cameron, Margaux, Johnson, Ruby, Lacy, T. Austin, Wu, Joanna, Siegel, Peter, Holley, Jordan, Wine, Jennifer, and Hunt-White, Tracy
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This First Look report presents selected findings about student financial aid during the 2019-20 academic year. This document contains supplemental tables which feature state-level percentages of students receiving aid and average amounts received by undergraduate students. These findings are based on data from the 2019-20 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS:20). NPSAS:20 is a national study of undergraduate and graduate students enrolled any time between July 1, 2019, and June 30, 2020, in institutions that can participate in federal financial aid programs. The main purpose of NPSAS:20 is to measure how students and their families pay for postsecondary education and, particularly, their receipt of federal student aid given through Title IV of the Higher Education Act. [For the full report, see ED629547. For the summary, see ED629548.]
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- 2023
22. 2019-20 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS:20) First Look at Student Financial Aid Estimates for 2019-20--Summary. NCES 2023-466
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National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) (ED/IES), RTI International, Cameron, Margaux, Johnson, Ruby, Lacy, T. Austin, Wu, Joanna, Siegel, Peter, Holley, Jordan, Wine, Jennifer, and Hunt-White, Tracy
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This First Look report presents selected findings about student financial aid during the 2019-20 academic year. These findings are based on data from the 2019-20 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS:20). NPSAS:20 is a national study of undergraduate and graduate students enrolled any time between July 1, 2019, and June 30, 2020, in institutions that can participate in federal financial aid programs. The main purpose of NPSAS:20 is to measure how students and their families pay for postsecondary education and, particularly, their receipt of federal student aid given through Title IV of the Higher Education Act. Data used in this report are from about 80,800 undergraduate and 19,700 graduate student survey respondents attending approximately 2,200 institutions in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. This report classifies financial aid by type (grants, loans, work-study, and other) and source (federal, state, institution, employer, and other private sources). [For the full report, see ED629547. For the supplemental tables, see ED629549.]
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- 2023
23. 2019-20 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS:20): First Look at Student Financial Aid Estimates for 2019-20. NCES 2023-466
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National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) (ED/IES), RTI International, Cameron, Margaux, Johnson, Ruby, Lacy, T. Austin, Wu, Joanna, Siegel, Peter, Holley, Jordan, Wine, Jennifer, and Hunt-White, Tracy
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This First Look publication provides the first results of the 2019-20 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS:20), the most comprehensive national study of student financing of postsecondary education in the United States. This report includes information for about 80,800 undergraduate students and 19,700 graduate students attending 2,200 postsecondary institutions in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. This report describes the percentages of students receiving various types of financial aid and average amounts received, by type of institution attended, gender, race/ethnicity, attendance pattern, and income level. Percentages and average amounts are additionally described by dependency status for undergraduate students and by graduate program for graduate students. Supplemental tables feature state-level percentages of students receiving aid and average amounts received by undergraduate students. [For the summary, see ED629548. For the supplemental tables, see ED629549.]
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- 2023
24. HE Reform Consultation Analysis. Research Report
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Department for Education (DfE) (United Kingdom)
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The 'Higher Education Policy Statement and Reform Consultation' was launched in February 2022 with responses required by May 2022. This online consultation included 16 closed questions, which have been analysed quantitatively, and 29 open text boxes, which have been analysed qualitatively and the frequency of themes summarised quantitatively. The consultation was designed to gain views on proposals for higher education reform in relation to student number controls (SNCs), minimum eligibility requirements (MERs), maximum fee and loan limits for foundation years, eligibility for a state scholarship and growing high-quality level 4 and 5 provision. This consultation document also sets out: (1) how the Government is investing in higher education to prioritise provision that results in better outcomes for students, the economy and society; and (2) how the Government plans to tackle the rising cost of the system to taxpayers, while reducing debt levels for students and graduates. [This report was written by York Consulting.]
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- 2023
25. Closing the Digital Skills Gap: Unveiling Insights from Four Countries
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Progressive Policy Institute (PPI) and Maag, Taylor
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Just decades ago, the internet was an entirely new concept, but it's become second nature for billions of people and is now embedded into daily life across the world. While the internet is old news, there are recent technologies like blockchain, artificial intelligence (AI), and the cloud that have gone from niche, specialized roles in the global economy to the mainstream. This rapid and widespread digitalization has changed the nature of work, and as a result, digital skills are now regarded as essential for the modern workforce. While demand for digital skills is growing, unfortunately supply is lower than it needs to be. Workforce shortages persist across the tech industry with employers struggling to find skilled talent that is prepared for digital roles. A 2021 Rand Corporation report found that the global digital skills gap was widening due to the following factors: tech talent outpacing an already short supply; high costs and disorganized approaches to traditional education that increase barriers to learning; access to digital infrastructure and skills limited by socio-economic status. These findings highlight the barriers confronting workers who want to acquire digital skills. Policymakers around the world need to tackle this problem, both to ensure their industries and businesses can keep pace with the rate and scale of technological innovation, but also to ensure current and future workers will have more opportunities to develop the skills needed to succeed in changing labor markets.
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- 2023
26. Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities 2022 Annual Report
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Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU)
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For more than 37 years, the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU) has advocated on behalf of Hispanic higher education in the U.S. and around the world. The mission of the association is to Champion Hispanic Success in Higher Education. HACU fulfills its mission by: promoting the development of member colleges and universities; improving access to and the quality of postsecondary educational opportunities for Hispanic students; and meeting the needs of business, industry and government through the development and sharing of resources, information and expertise. The Annual Report highlights advocacy efforts, HACU's membership, conferences and events, financials, leadership programs, student services and activities supported by HACU's staff at its National Headquarters in San Antonio, Texas and regional offices in Washington, D.C. and Sacramento, California. [For the 2021 report, see ED620469.]
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- 2023
27. The Higher Education Act (HEA): A Primer. CRS Report R43351, Version 20. Updated
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Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service (CRS) and Fountain, Joselynn H.
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This report provides a brief overview of the major provisions of the Higher Education Act (HEA), organized by title and part. Appendix A of this report provides detailed appropriations figures for HEA programs, from FY2019 through FY2023. Appendix B gives a brief overview of the General Education Provisions Act, which applies to the majority of federal education programs administered by Department of Education (ED), including those programs authorized by the HEA. Appendix C provides information related to the eight comprehensive reauthorizations that the HEA has undergone.
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- 2023
28. Effect of Regents' Scholarship Awards on Degree Completions. Issue Brief
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Utah System of Higher Education (USHE) and Campbell, Brett
- Abstract
Recently new types of scholarships have emerged known as promise scholarships. A promise scholarship aims to increase collegiate attainment by promising financial aid to eligible students. Promise scholarships differ from traditional scholarships in that promise scholarships are non-competitive and not necessarily needs based. Typical eligibility criteria for promise scholarships include a set minimum GPA and residence within a specific geographic area. Utah's Regents' Scholarship could be considered a promise scholarship. For Regents', the criteria included a minimum GPA of 3.0 with no grade below a "C" and residence within Utah for high school grades 9 through 12; specific coursework was also required. This brief studies the effects of the Regent's Scholarship awards finding that recipients earned more associate and bachelor's degrees in time than similar students, required less institutional and federal support, and helped more underrepresented populations complete degrees on time.
- Published
- 2023
29. Underwater: Student Mothers and Fathers Struggle to Support Their Families and Pay off College Loans. Research Brief
- Author
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Institute for Women's Policy Research (IWPR), Dundar, Afet, Tighe, Lauren A., and Turner, Jennifer
- Abstract
Institute for Women's Policy Research (IWPR) conducted original research on an often-overlooked group of students--parents with children--as they struggle to make ends meet while pursuing academic degrees and certificates. Student parents often face enormous financial barriers to academic success. They report high financial insecurity including issues with food, housing and other basic needs. For students with children, borrowing for postsecondary education may mean accumulating debt without improved labor market outcomes or the financial ability to pay off loans. This is because the financial barriers and logistical challenges, such as inadequate access to reliable child care, student parents face may result in leaving college early without a credential, which has implications for future earnings.
- Published
- 2023
30. BOOSTing Transfer Pathways through Strategic Finance and Affordability
- Author
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Institute for Higher Education Policy (IHEP), HCM Strategists, Collis, Jessica, Sharpe, Rachelle, Couturier, Lara, Moore, Cristen, DiBenedetto, Katelyn, and Roberson, Amanda Janice
- Abstract
TransferBOOST (Bachelor's Opportunity Options that are Straightforward and Transparent) is a multi-year state-level initiative developed to provide students with affordable, quality, well-supported two- to four-year pathways. Affordability matters a great deal for transfer students, but it has typically not been understood or prioritized. The IHEP and HCM teams joined forces with rpk GROUP to offer technical assistance to TransferBOOST institutions and state partners to make strategic finance and college affordability a signature feature of the initiative. The second brief in the series outlines the steps partnerships took and offers guidance on how institutions can use the Transfer Affordability Financial Tool. It also provides clear steps for how states can support institutions in improving transfer affordability. [This report was written with contributions from Katie Hagan. For "BOOSTing Student Success through Equitable and Affordable Transfer Pathways: Lessons Learned for Higher Education Policymakers and Practitioners from the TransferBOOST Initiative," see ED628654. For "BOOSTing Transfer Partnerships to Promote Equitable and Affordable Transfer Pathways," see ED628655.]
- Published
- 2023
31. Unlocking the Potential of Private-School Choice: Avoiding and Overcoming Obstacles to Successful Implementation
- Author
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Manhattan Institute (MI) and Garnett, Nicole Stelle
- Abstract
In order to realize all the benefits of parental-choice programs, advocates, policymakers, and participating schools have to pay more attention to implementation challenges, both when designing parental-choice policies and after new programs are enacted. This report discusses both categories of implementation challenges. The first category--challenges that result from policy design--includes features of many programs that make them difficult to implement, such as limits on the tax benefits available in scholarship tax-credit programs, low scholarship amounts, and eligibility restrictions. The second category--challenges that occur after programs are enacted--result from advocates' and participating schools' failure to take steps that would increase the likelihood of programmatic success, such as prioritizing academic improvement among program participants, better informing parents about the choices available to them, and encouraging the development of more and better schools and school networks. This report focuses on "private-school-choice" programs--that is, programs that enable students to use public resources for private-school tuition. To the extent that education savings account (ESA) funds are used to enable participants to attend private schools, as they will be in many, if not most, cases, the report addresses implementation issues affecting ESAs. While the policy landscape is shifting rapidly, and more states undoubtedly will enact universal ESAs in the months and years to come--the vast majority of parental-choice programs are, and will continue to be, limited in scope and eligibility, necessitating continued attention to the issues addressed in this report critical to their success.
- Published
- 2023
32. Strengthening Pathways into the Teaching Profession in Texas: Challenges and Opportunities
- Author
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Learning Policy Institute, Bland, Jennifer A., Wojcikiewicz, Steven K., Darling-Hammond, Linda, and Wei, Wesley
- Abstract
This report summarizes teacher workforce challenges and recent initiatives in Texas that are shaping the state of the educator workforce in important ways. Ongoing teacher shortages have led to the creation of a wide range of pathways into the profession, featuring varying types and amounts of training. A growing body of research demonstrates that these differences in pathways are associated with meaningful differences in teachers' knowledge, skills, and effectiveness, as well as the rates at which they enter and leave the profession. These differences have implications for student learning, school management, and equity, since the districts that have the most difficulty hiring fully prepared teachers are those that serve the most students of color and students from low-income families. This report reviews the emerging research; describes the substantial efforts Texas leaders and institutions are making to address concerns about workforce preparation and stability; and provides additional actionable, research-based policy recommendations. [Funding for this report was provided by the Charles Butt Foundation. For the Research Brief, see ED630217.]
- Published
- 2023
33. Family Empowerment Scholarship: Analysis of Student Movement and Characteristics, 2022-23. Evaluation Matters. Volume 12, Number 4
- Author
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Miami-Dade County Public Schools, Office of Assessment, Research, and Data Analysis (ARDA), Kareem D. Piper, and Steven M. Urdegar
- Abstract
The Family Empowerment Scholarship (FES) Program, signed into law on May 9, 2019 (1002.394, F.S.), was established to provide children of Florida's families with financial assistance to attend an eligible private school of their choosing with funding equal to 100% of a given school district's average cost per student. Eligibility is limited to students whose families have annual household incomes of up to 400% of the federal poverty level (FPL), which equates to over 125% of the average median income (Miami-Dade Economic Advisory Trust, 2021). The purpose of this report is twofold: (a) to examine the movement of students between the District's schools and the FES from October 2019 through October 2022 and (b) to explore the demographic characteristics of participating students. The population for this study consisted of students in Miami-Dade County Public Schools (M-DCPS) who participated in the FES from August 2016-17 to October 2022-23. The sample consisted of four groups of FES participants: (a) students who did not previously attend a location in M-DCPS, (b) students whose prior school indicated participation in the FES, (c) students whose prior school was a location in M-DCPS, and (d) students assigned to any non-FES location in M-DCPS whose prior school also indicated participation in the FES.
- Published
- 2023
34. South Carolina Commission on Higher Education Statistical Abstract, 2023. 45th Edition
- Author
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South Carolina Commission on Higher Education and Christopher Robinson
- Abstract
The "South Carolina Higher Education Statistical Abstract" is a comprehensive, single-source compilation of tables and graphs which report data frequently requested by the governor, legislators, college and university staff, other state government officials, and the general public. The 2023 edition of the Statistical Abstract marks the 45th year of this valuable publication. This "Abstract" includes the most recent statistics on enrollment, degrees awarded, faculty, tuition and fees, funding, and other factual data. Relevant terminology is listed in the introduction to each section.
- Published
- 2023
35. Education Scholarship Accounts: Model Policy. ExcelinEd Policy Toolkit - 2023
- Author
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ExcelinEd
- Abstract
The Education Scholarship Account (ESA) Act allows parents to use the funds that would have been allocated to their child at their resident school district for an education program of the parents' choosing. The Act identifies student eligibility as well as approved educational expenses. The Act establishes procedures for parents to apply to the ESA program. The Act establishes procedures for an authority to oversee the ESA program. The Act also provides academic and fiscal transparency measures for participating families, schools and education providers. This document contains a model policy for education scholarship accounts. Parents use ESAs to direct their children's education funding to the state-approved schools, courses, programs and services of their choice.
- Published
- 2023
36. Why Interstate Child Care Scholarship Policy Choices Matter in the Upper Valley: 'You Can Only Charge the Families so Much.' National Issue Brief #167
- Author
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University of New Hampshire, Carsey School of Public Policy, Boege, Sarah, and Carson, Jess
- Abstract
In this brief, the authors explore how state-level decisions in New Hampshire and Vermont manifest in the early childhood education and care sector, through the lens of the interstate Upper Valley region. They demonstrate the significant differences in the reach and adequacy of child care financial assistance programs ("child care scholarships") across state lines, with Vermont's program setting family income eligibility thresholds higher and delivering higher-value reimbursements to child care providers than New Hampshire's program. While scholarships are key for widening low-income families' access to high quality care, they are not a panacea. Not all eligible families participate in child care scholarship programs. Those who do may still be required to pay substantial cost shares. Similarly, not all providers accept scholarships as payment, due to low reimbursement rates and administrative burdens. The authors identify key policy opportunities to strengthen scholarships' impact, including expanding family eligibility, increasing reimbursement rates to providers, and encouraging providers to participate in scholarship programs. [This brief is part of the "Early Childhood in the Upper Valley Series." For the prior brief in this series, "Changing Child Care Supply in New Hampshire and Vermont's Upper Valley. National Issue Brief #166," see ED629709.]
- Published
- 2023
37. How America Pays for College, 2023: Sallie Mae's National Study of College Students and Parents
- Author
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Sallie Mae Bank and Ipsos
- Abstract
For 16 years, Sallie Mae has surveyed college students and parents of undergraduate students about their attitudes toward higher education and how they're paying for it. This year's report explores education funding sources--from family income and savings to scholarships, grants, and borrowed funds--and evaluates trends in payment strategies over time. This year's report provides learnings about families' awareness of the financial aid process including researching and applying for scholarships, completing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA®), and understanding financial aid offers. The report also considers the steps undergraduate families took to plan for paying for higher education. Finally, for the first time, this report explores how students attending public Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) approach higher education financing. The research was conducted between March 31, 2023, and May 8, 2023. [For the 2022 report, see ED624387.]
- Published
- 2023
38. The State of Higher Education in Ohio: 2022 Year in Review
- Author
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Ohio Department of Higher Education
- Abstract
It has been four years since Mike DeWine was first sworn in to serve as Ohio's 70th governor, joined by Jon Husted as lieutenant governor. From the very beginning, Governor DeWine requested that his Cabinet listen carefully to the people of the state and then proceed to act with a sense of urgency to strengthen and improve the great state of Ohio. This annual "State of Higher Education Report" highlights 2022, and provides a brief summary of what the DeWine-Husted Administration has accomplished in its first four years leading Ohio -- with a promise to build on this record in the new term. [For the 2021 report, see ED627875.]
- Published
- 2023
39. The ABCs of School Choice: The Comprehensive Guide to Every Private School Choice Program in America. 2023 Edition
- Author
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EdChoice
- Abstract
This annual publication of "The ABCs of School Choice" is a comprehensive, data-rich guide to every private school choice program in America. This edition of "The ABCs of School Choice" defines each of the four types of school choice: education savings accounts, vouchers, tax-credit scholarships and individual tax credits and deductions. The guidebook includes an entire spread of charts showing the growth over time of private school choice programs, spending on those programs and student participation in those programs. "The ABCs of School Choice" features a spread for each school choice program that includes the most recent participation, funding and eligibility data as well as information on the program's rules, regulations and legal history. Following a preface by Robert C. Enlow, the President and CEO of EdChoice, contents of this report include: (1) Types of Private School Choice; (2) Other Types of School Choice; (3) School Choice Illustrated; (4) State Index; (5) Education Savings Account Programs; (6) School Voucher Programs; (7) Tax-Credit Education Savings Account Programs; (8) Tax-Credit Scholarship Programs; (9) Individual Tax Credit and Deduction Programs; (10) 529 Savings Accounts; (11) Rules and Regulations; (12) Legal History; (13) Data Sources for Program Profiles; and (14) Methodology and Data Sources for Eligibility. [For the 2022 edition, see ED620288.]
- Published
- 2023
40. Revisiting Nebraska's Private Education Sector
- Author
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EdChoice, Kristof, John M., Ritter, Colyn, and Catt, Andrew D.
- Abstract
Nebraska does not currently have any private educational choice programs, but recent legislative pushes have brought options such as education savings accounts (ESAs) into the spotlight. ESAs allow parents to withdraw their children from public district or charter schools and receive a deposit of public funds into government-authorized savings accounts with restricted, but multiple, uses. The characteristics of Nebraska's private school sector can inform policy debates surrounding the potential creation of educational choice programs, such as ESAs. From March 31 to May 23 2022, EdChoice administered a survey of Nebraska private school leaders. This brief provides a descriptive analysis of the results of that survey, including tuition and fees, the number of open seats, regulatory concerns, and interest in educational choice programs.
- Published
- 2023
41. The Fiscal Effects of the Indiana Choice Scholarship Program. Working Paper No.11
- Author
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EdChoice and Scafidi, Benjamin
- Abstract
The Indiana Choice Scholarship Program (ICSP), which began in fall 2011, is a state taxpayer-funded financial aid program that helps low and lower-middle income Hoosiers to send their children to the private K-12 school of their choice. This voucher program has been extremely popular among families, as the number of students receiving scholarships has increased from 3,911 students in academic year (AY) 2012 to 36,707 by 2020. This report addresses two questions regarding the fiscal effects of the ICSP up through and including academic year (AY) 2020: (1) The fiscal effects of the ICSP on the state of Indiana budget; and (2) The fiscal effects of the ICSP on local school corporation budgets (in Indiana public school districts are termed "school corporations"). The estimates in this report suggest that the ICSP has provided modest fiscal benefits to taxpayers to date--however, the fiscal savings per scholarship recipient are quite large. Therefore, as more students access the ISCP the savings to Indiana taxpayers will increase significantly. The major findings include: (1) The ICSP saved state taxpayers a total of $42.5 million in 2019-20. These savings translate to savings of $1,158 per scholarship student--a significant sum on a per student basis; and (2) The ICSP yielded a total of $60.6 million in savings to local public school corporations in 2017-18, which was the most recent year with complete data available. These savings to local school corporations were $1,709 per student. These findings are not surprising given that the average scholarship awards are below both total expenditures per student and state per pupil funding as well.
- Published
- 2023
42. Sustained Research through Collaborations: A Study of CADFP Alumni and Follow-On Grant Activities
- Author
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Institute of International Education (IIE)
- Abstract
The Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowship Program (CADFP) enables exchanges between academic scholars in the United States and Canada (Diaspora Fellows) and scholars at African higher education institutions (Host Fellows). Established in 2013 by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and implemented by the Institute of International Education (IIE), the program funds research and teaching collaborations that facilitate knowledge sharing, build the capacity of African higher education institutions, and create international partnerships between the African continent and the African scholar diaspora. Approaching its tenth year, the CADFP has developed a robust alumni network of over 600 Diaspora and Host Fellows. This research study aims to explore the trajectories of these CADFP alumni and the follow-on grant funding they have pursued beyond the initial fellowship grant disbursed by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The research brief focuses on three areas of inquiry: (1) what types of follow-on grants CADFP Fellows have applied to and received; (2) how their CADFP experience enabled Fellows to apply to collaborative grants with their counterparts; and (3) effective practices that enable this grant-related collaboration. The findings from this research inform programs looking to foster international research and collaboration among program beneficiaries and build sustained pipelines for further research beyond the fellowship.
- Published
- 2023
43. High School and Beyond Plan: Universal Online Platform. Report to the Legislature
- Author
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Washington Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction, Kim Reykdal, Jill Diehl, and Misty O’Brien
- Abstract
The High School Graduation Plan (HSBP) is a graduation requirement and a critical component of supporting students' career development throughout their secondary education experience. The Washington Legislature has revised and strengthened HSBP requirements to include the implementation of a universal online HSBP platform that can be readily accessed by students, families, teachers, and others who support students' academic and career development. This new platform will alleviate many existing equity issues and create new opportunities for students to develop and curate a HSBP that aligns with their needs and interests. The Legislature requires the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) to facilitate the transition of the HSBP to a universal online platform that will ensure consistent and equitable access to the needed information and support to guide students' educational experience and ensure preparation for their postsecondary plans. This is the first of three reports to the Legislature.
- Published
- 2023
44. Keeping California's Promise: Investing Equitably in California College Affordability. Equity Alert
- Author
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The Institute for College Access & Success (TICAS) and Education Trust-West
- Abstract
State need-based financial aid programs are a key driver of college access and completion for lower-income students and racially marginalized students in California, most of whom attend public two- and four-year colleges and universities and come from families with annual incomes of less than $40,000. As the state's largest need-based financial aid program, Cal Grants are a cornerstone of college affordability for hundreds of thousands of Californians every year; the program provides financial aid that helps students cover tuition and living expenses without the need to repay. However the state has proposed adding more funding to the less equitable Middle Class Scholarship (MCS) program. This Equity Alert provides an overview of why Cal Grant Reform is needed; describes the limitations of the MCS program in serving low-income, BIPOC, and community college students in California; and provides recommendations that state policymakers can act on this year to advance equity-centered financial aid reforms.
- Published
- 2023
45. The 123s of School Choice: What the Research Says about Private School Choice Programs in America. 2023 Edition
- Author
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EdChoice, DiPerna, Paul, Kristof, John M., Lueken, Martin F., McShane, Michael Q., and Ritter, Colyn
- Abstract
The goal of "The 123s" is to present the increasingly large body of private school choice research in a clear and easy-to-read format and cite the relevant studies so that anyone who is interested in the individual results can easily find them and read in more detail. This report is divided into 11 sections. The first section summarizes the number of studies and how many come to which conclusion. The following sections present the eight outcomes covered in this publication, including school safety and climate--a new subject of study. They are followed by a list of reviews that other researchers conducted about the eight outcomes covered. The last section discusses the strengths and limitations of research on school choice. Finally, tables in the Appendix present the various programs, organized by type. [For the 2022 report, see ED625418.]
- Published
- 2023
46. EdChoice 101: An Introduction to the Basics of School Choice and Supplement to 'The ABCs of School Choice.' 2023 Edition
- Author
-
EdChoice
- Abstract
There are many different schooling options, but not all educational choice programs are created equal. Public charter schools and public-to-public transfers, for example, have provided options within the traditional system, but those programs leave many schooling types off-limits for families. EdChoice's goal as the nation's oldest school choice organization is to highlight and promote the programs that create the most pathways for students to lead successful lives, focusing on five types of programs: (1) education savings accounts (ESAs); (2) tax-credit ESAs; (3) vouchers; (4) tax-credit scholarships programs; and (5) refundable tax credits. Individual tax credits, deductions, and 529 savings accounts are also highlighted. These programs are more limited and tend to provide minimal financial assistance to families. This guide introduces the fundamentals of school choice and answers some basic questions about why and how these programs work. This guide is a supplement to "The ABCs of School Choice" (ED628554). [For "EdChoice 101: An Introduction to the Basics of School Choice. 2022 Edition," see ED625411.]
- Published
- 2023
47. Language Attitudes and Policy Preferences: Insights from International Scholarship Applicants to Hungraian Universities
- Author
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Mambetaliev, Askar
- Abstract
This study examined the attitudes of individuals seeking scholarships to study abroad, exploring whether their views on languages and language policy models vary based on gender, study programs, and countries. An online survey was administered to approximately 130 Hungarian government scholarship applicants from diverse nations. Statistical methods were employed to analyze responses, revealing variations and correlations between demographic and attitudinal variables. Participants expressed preferences for multilingual and monolingual language policies, aligning with their attitudes. The findings indicate that most participants pursued language learning with instrumental motivation, aiming to achieve educational and career objectives. Most participants expressed a desire for a multilingual language policy model in their home countries. While many embraced the proposal to adopt English as the medium of instruction, others maintained a critical perspective, acknowledging both the positive and negative impacts of English and multilingualism. Additionally, participants underscored the significance of preserving native languages in their respective countries.
- Published
- 2023
48. 2023 Affordability Report
- Author
-
North Dakota University System, Wilke, Jamie, and Zastoupil, Brenda
- Abstract
College affordability is a significant factor in student access, retention, and completion. Tuition and fee rates are a component of affordability, as is the availability of financial aid programs from federal, state, institutional and private sources, among other factors. Strategically designed approaches to college affordability can better assist students in preparing for post-secondary education, accessing programs, and degree persistence. This report outlines key affordability factors within the North Dakota University System (NDUS) by focusing on student costs and availability of financial aid. This report includes regional comparisons, which include peer institutions from Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. This 2023 affordability report looks at the following numerical data for higher education in the state of North Dakota: (1) Tuition, Mandatory Fees, Housing and Food; (2) Cost of Attendance; (3) Financial Aid Overview; (4) Federal Financial Aid Sources; (5) Annual Student Loan Disbursements; (6) Indebtedness at Graduation; (7) 2021-22 Grants, Scholarships and Waivers; (8) 2021-22 Total Financial Aid Disbursements and % of Cost Covered; (9) State Financial Aid Programs and Appropriation; (10) Other Sources of Financial Aid; and (11) Net Price. [For the 2022 report, see ED624643.]
- Published
- 2023
49. Higher Education Tax Benefits: Brief Overview and Budgetary Effects. CRS Report R41967, Version 54. Updated
- Author
-
Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service (CRS), Crandall-Hollick, Margot L., and McDermott, Brendan
- Abstract
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 reinstated--the personal exemption for dependents (including college-age dependents) and miscellaneous itemized deductions (including for unreimbursed work-related education expenses)--while the exclusion for discharged or forgiven student loan debt will only be available in limited circumstances. The available tax benefits are a mixture of credits, deductions, exclusions, and other incentives. The benefits can be placed into one of three general categories: (1) incentives for current year expenses; (2) preferential tax treatment of student loans; and (3) incentives for saving for college. The Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) estimates currently available higher-education tax benefits will cost an average of $25 billion per year over the FY2020-FY2024 budgetary window. This report provides a brief overview of the higher education tax benefits that are currently available to students and their families. The report contrasts higher education tax benefits with traditional student aid; presents a brief history of higher education tax policy over the past 60 years, including recent legislative proposals to modify these tax incentives; summarizes key features of the available tax benefits; and provides JCT estimates of revenue losses resulting from individual tax provisions. The summary is contained in Table 1 and provides information on various aspects of each tax benefit including the type of benefit (credit, deduction, etc.), the annual dollar amount of the benefit, what expenses qualify for the benefit, what level of education the benefit can be claimed for, income levels at which the benefit phases out, and, if the provision is temporary, when it expires. Table 2 contains estimates of the annual forgone federal revenue attributable to each provision.
- Published
- 2022
50. An Education Road Map for the 118th Congress. Backgrounder. No. 3737
- Author
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Heritage Foundation, Center for Education Policy, Butcher, Jonathan, and Burke, Lindsey M.
- Abstract
As Washington prepares to welcome a new Congress in January 2023, incoming policymakers who want to improve education for every student and give parents more control over where and how their children are educated have many policy options at their disposal. New Members of Congress who want to protect taxpayers and rein in college costs also have the tools to do so. It is well past time for Congress to allow more choices among existing preschool and K-12 programs in areas under its jurisdiction, and to curb government spending and higher education handouts.
- Published
- 2022
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