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Chester Polson; Emily Weisburst – Texas Education Research Center, 2024
Each year as tuition costs increase, more students rely on financial aid to attend institutions of higher education. Financial aid packages, which are created to encourage individual investments in education, consist of a variety of types of funding assistance and aid packages, and are highly tailored to individual students. In general, financial…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Paying for College, Student Employment, Work Study Programs
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Cheslock, John J.; Riggs, Sam O. – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2023
Over the last forty years, non-elite private institutions have steadily increased listed tuition and institutional aid. This practice has continued even though the net tuition revenue gains from incoming students have become minimal. We present a new explanation for why these yearly increases continue: The pricing structure of non-elite privates…
Descriptors: Tuition, Private Colleges, Student Financial Aid, Income
Ann-Marie Waterman – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Over the past two decades, the practice of tuition discounting has become commonplace, and the discount percentage has steadily increased since 2008. This study replicates the work executed by Juliana Browning in 2013. This study focuses on the sustainability and viability of Title IV participating, private, four-year, not for profit, degree…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Private Colleges, Tuition, Student Costs
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Blake Heller; Sarah Kroeger; Catherine Lawlor – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2023
Summary: In spite of a large literature on the causal effects of financial aid, the impact of funding on college outcomes remains an area of ongoing research with important unanswered questions. Studying the impact of financial aid presents the ongoing challenge of how to identify causal effects, as aid receipt is rarely random and at least partly…
Descriptors: Need Analysis (Student Financial Aid), Student Financial Aid, Paying for College, Student Loan Programs
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Wang Shaokun; Luxana Keyuraphan; Niran Sutheeniran; Patchara Dechhome – World Journal of Education, 2023
The objectives of this research were (1) to study the current situation of financial aid education in universities in Guangxi, (2) to propose the guidelines for the development of financial aid education in universities in Guangxi, and (3) to evaluate the adaptability and feasibility of the guidelines for the development of financial aid education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Student Financial Aid, Access to Education
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Khalilah R. Lauderdale; Ralitsa Todorova; Zoe Corwin – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2025
This paper seeks to enhance understanding of how low-income students navigate financial stress by integrating the asset-based concept of financial well-being and including a focus on the institutional context. Data collected from 378 interviews with students from low-income backgrounds illustrate complex ways that students experience financial…
Descriptors: College Students, Financial Problems, Low Income Students, Stress Variables
Cassandria Dortch – Congressional Research Service, 2024
Veterans' educational assistance programs provide benefits or services to eligible service members and veterans and their family members, as applicable, to help such individuals pursue education or training. The GI Bills provide financial assistance while recipients are enrolled in approved education or training programs. Eligibility is based on a…
Descriptors: Veterans, Veterans Education, Student Financial Aid, Federal Aid
National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, 2025
The Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended, specifies a loan origination fee of 1 percent for all Direct Subsidized Loans and Direct Unsubsidized Loans, and a fee of 4 percent for all Direct PLUS Loans for both parent borrowers and graduate and professional student borrowers. Student loan origination fees, the hidden student loan tax, generated…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Student Loan Programs, Fees, Federal Aid
Institute for College Access & Success, 2025
The Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) is New York's primary aid program, accounting for 80 percent of state awards to students attending public, private nonprofit, and for-profit higher education institutions in the state. TAP is available to state residents attending two-year or four-year degree granting programs, as well as students attending…
Descriptors: Tuition Grants, Paying for College, College Students, Low Income Students
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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
Terrell Dunn – Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, 2025
Nontraditional students--students who are often older, not coming directly from high school, or have job and family responsibilities, etc.--now constitute the majority of college students. These students have significantly different needs from those of traditional students, but most institutions are still not built to support them. At a time when…
Descriptors: Nontraditional Students, Student Needs, Higher Education, Student Characteristics
Artem Gulish; Catherine Morris; Ban Cheah; Jeff Strohl – Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, 2024
Is graduate school worth it? Graduate degrees--including master's, professional, and doctoral degrees--can help individuals boost their earnings and improve career advancement opportunities. But they can also be high-risk investments given rising costs, student debt, and the current lack of transparency about program outcomes. "Graduate…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Graduate Study, Cost Effectiveness, Paying for College
Matthew R. Surrell – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The challenges facing higher education institutions across this country continue to increase, becoming more and more complex with each passing semester. Higher education administrators and those who aspire to be such must constantly stay abreast of all potential adverse issues, but especially those that affect the educational success of our…
Descriptors: Community College Students, Academic Persistence, Barriers, Parent Financial Contribution
Melissa Emrey-Arras – US Government Accountability Office, 2024
The Department of Education can approve relief for student loan borrowers through a process called borrower defense to repayment (borrower defense) if colleges engaged in certain types of misconduct. As of April 30, 2024, Education had discharged (i.e., forgiven) a cumulative total of $17.2 billion in federal student loans for 974,820 borrowers…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Financial Aid, Student Loan Programs, Loan Repayment
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Alyssa Takatori; Karla A. Weber-Wandel; Z. W. Taylor – Journal of Research Initiatives, 2025
The process of applying for and receiving student financial aid is an incredibly complex process involving multiple stakeholders (students, institutions, parents, counselors), levels of information (federal, state, institutional, personal), and modes of communication (print, email, text message, social media, phone calls). Moreover,…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, College Applicants, College Students, Financial Aid Applicants
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