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Jungmin Lee; Hongwook Suh – Innovative Higher Education, 2025
For the last two decades, dual enrollment has rapidly grown across the country. Previous studies consistently show that dual enrollment is positively associated with college enrollment, readiness, and persistence. However, descriptive statistics show that low-income students and racial minority students are underrepresented in dual enrollment…
Descriptors: Low Income Students, Dual Enrollment, Student Financial Aid, State Programs
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Meredith S. Billings; Paul G. Rubin; Denisa Gándara – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2025
In 2022, New Mexico joined the list of states that adopted a statewide promise program, offering tuition and fee assistance for eligible students to pursue higher education. The New Mexico Opportunity Scholarship (NMOS) differs from existing programs by including part-time and summer enrollment, academic and workforce degrees, and older adult…
Descriptors: Scholarships, State Aid, State Programs, Student Financial Aid
David B. Monaghan; Crystal Almanzar; Madison Laughman; Allyson Ritchey – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
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…
Descriptors: College Programs, Program Development, Scholarships, Models
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Jennifer Hogg; Sam Ayers; Johanna Lacoe; Alan Perez; Jesse Rothstein – California Policy Lab, 2024
Food insecurity is widespread among college students in the United States. Food benefits delivered through the CalFresh program, California's version of the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), can reduce hunger by helping students pay for groceries but may not reach all eligible students. To date, higher education systems…
Descriptors: Community College Students, Hunger, Food, State Programs
Tennessee Higher Education Commission, 2025
The Tennessee Education Lottery Scholarship (TELS) program was designed to meet the unique needs of the State of Tennessee, while also incorporating the hallmark elements of existing merit-based aid programs in other states. This manuscript provides a snapshot of TELS recipients and their outcomes, including narrative discussion on the current…
Descriptors: Competitive Selection, State Programs, Outcomes of Education, Scholarships
Mark Wiederspan – Midwestern Higher Education Compact, 2025
This report examines state-funded loan forgiveness and conditional grant programs, designed to alleviate student loan debt and address workforce shortages in high-need fields. These service-contingent programs incentivize graduates to work in targeted occupations or underserved areas in exchange for debt relief.
Descriptors: Grants, Student Financial Aid, Debt (Financial), State Programs
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Cara Tan; Jennifer Hogg; Johanna Lacoe; Jesse Rothstein – California Policy Lab, 2025
Food insecurity is widespread among college students in the United States. CalFresh food benefits, known federally as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, can help students in California pay for food, but may not reach all eligible students. This data point provides estimates of CalFresh participation rates among community…
Descriptors: Welfare Services, Nutrition, Federal Programs, State Programs
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Custer, Bradley D.; Akaeze, Hope O. – Research in Higher Education, 2021
State financial aid grant programs are commonly categorized as either need-based, merit-based, or both, but their initial eligibility requirements include many more factors than just financial need and academic merit. A categorization of programs that accounts for all requirements would facilitate a more nuanced and precise understanding of state…
Descriptors: Classification, State Aid, Student Financial Aid, Grants
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Daniel Sparks – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2024
In response to rising college tuition and student debt over the past three decades, some institutions, localities, and states have implemented a range of tuition-free promise programs to promote college access and success. Programs vary widely in their design features, including eligibility stipulations and award structure. I explore the growing…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Educational Policy, Eligibility, State Programs
Odle, Taylor K.; Lee, Jason C.; Gentile, Steven P. – Grantee Submission, 2021
As college promise programs proliferate across the United States with noted intentions to promote access through increased affordability, it is necessary to understand the relationship between these programs and other forms of financial aid, including loans. Using federal, state, and program-level data, we leverage a natural experiment to estimate…
Descriptors: State Programs, Paying for College, Student Loan Programs, Student Financial Aid
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Anderson, Drew M.; Zaber, Melanie A. – RAND Corporation, 2021
Experts from the RAND Corporation prepared this independent report on New Jersey's Tuition Aid Grant (TAG) program for low-income college students. TAG is the nation's most generous state-funded financial aid program on a per-resident-undergraduate basis. Currently, TAG distributes around $475 million in grants per year, and an award covers about…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Low Income Students, Grants, State Aid
Human Development Institute, 2021
Comprehensive Transition & Postsecondary Programs (CTPs) were created by the Higher Education Opportunity Act (HEOA, 2008). They support students with Intellectual Disabilities (ID) who want to continue academic, career, or technical instruction in higher education to better prepare for competitive integrated employment and independent living.…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Transitional Programs, Intellectual Disability, Students with Disabilities
Scott-Clayton, Judith; Libassi, C. J.; Sparks, Daniel – Urban Institute, 2022
After decades of frustration with increasingly complex college financial aid policies, a nationwide shift toward "free college" programs has gained momentum. New York State joined the free college movement in 2017, when Governor Andrew Cuomo announced his goal to make public higher education tuition-free for most students during his…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Two Year College Students, Undergraduate Students, Paying for College
Council of Independent Colleges, 2020
"Free college" has become a catch phrase for a variety of policy proposals intended to support this national priority. Most free college proposals share important goals: to reduce costs to students and families, to increase the number of college graduates, and to help students acquire skills needed in the workforce. Free college…
Descriptors: State Programs, Program Effectiveness, Access to Education, Student Costs
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Salazar, Rogelio – New Directions for Community Colleges, 2023
As statewide college promise programs continue to develop, emerging equity concerns necessitate interrogating whom programs benefit and how expense funds can be applied. Critical Policy Analysis (CPA) is used in this chapter to understand how statewide promise programs advance or hinder racial equity across eligibility and financial aid support…
Descriptors: College Programs, State Programs, Equal Education, Educational Finance
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