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Sam Ayers; Jennifer Hogg; Johanna Lacoe; Alan Perez; Jesse Rothstein – California Policy Lab, 2025
When the COVID-19 pandemic began, the federal government responded by expanding the country's safety-net programs, including through stimulus payments. There were also significant federal policy changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the largest food assistance program in the United States. Benefit amounts were increased,…
Descriptors: Community College Students, Eligibility, Enrollment Trends, COVID-19
Christian Michael Smith; Laura T. Hamilton; Charlie Eaton – Research in Higher Education, 2025
Federal student aid formulas prioritize income over wealth. Using nationally representative data from two cohorts, we argue that federal student aid policy thus under-addresses wealth-driven financial need and that this oversight contributes to racial disparities in student debt, in turn reinforcing the United States's longstanding racial wealth…
Descriptors: Federal Aid, Student Financial Aid, Financial Needs, Needs Assessment
Dabin Hwang; Rebekah Levine Coley – Urban Education, 2025
Extending work documenting historical resource inequities across U.S. schools, we examined how school financial and social resources mediate the relationship between family income and student achievement, and tested how these associations varied by race and ethnicity. Merging administrative school data sources to a nationally representative sample…
Descriptors: Educational Resources, Racial Differences, Ethnicity, Educational Finance
Amy Tang; Yang Wang; Chunqiang Tang – Open Education Studies, 2025
Previous research has provided compelling evidence of a strong connection between extracurricular activities and positive youth development. While both school offerings and student participation affect the outcomes of extracurricular activities, earlier studies have primarily focused on student participation. In contrast, this study shifts the…
Descriptors: Extracurricular Activities, Clubs, High Schools, Institutional Characteristics
Jurgen Willems; Fredrik O. Andersson – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2025
We evaluate public opinion on the sufficiency of school funding and teacher salaries in the United States, using a representative survey (n = 12,151). Data were collected during the COVID-19 pandemic (2020/2021), with schools and teachers having a reduced role due to homeschooling. While opinions are diverse for sufficiency of school funding, most…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Educational Finance, Teacher Salaries, COVID-19
S. H. Choi; T. Templin; D. Glenn – Health Education Research, 2025
The purpose of this study was to elicit smoking couples' preferences for the 'format' and 'content' of couple-based interventions and partner support from both partners' perspectives, using an online discrete choice experiment (DCE) survey. An online DCE study was conducted during online interviews with 56 smoking couples (N = 112). Conditional…
Descriptors: Smoking, Spouses, Interpersonal Relationship, Preferences
Jeff Allen – ACT Education Corp., 2025
Among students in the 2024 ACT-tested graduating class, over 374,000 took the PreACT 8/9® or PreACT test before taking the ACT. This issue brief compares the ACT scores and college enrollment rates for students who took a test from the PreACT Suite of Assessments versus those who did not. The brief also examines average PreACT-to-ACT gain scores…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Scores, College Enrollment, Academic Achievement
Clea McNeely; Hedy N. Chang; Sue Fothergill; Isis West – Attendance Works, 2025
Maryland law allows districts to apply exclusionary approaches to unexcused absences. Exclusionary practices can include removing students from the classroom and preventing students from getting credit for completed work. This report examines how long-standing policies and practices of the truancy system--the application of the unexcused absence…
Descriptors: Attendance, Truancy, Low Income Students, Minority Group Students
Peter D. Wiens; Leona Calkins; Jacob D. Skousen – Urban Education, 2025
This study, using data from the American Teacher Panel survey given by the RAND corporation in 2017, examined teachers' experiences with teacher leadership (TL) in the United States. Geographic features like urbanicity and teacher demographic characteristics were used to predict different components of TL. Black, Indigenous, and people of color…
Descriptors: Teacher Leadership, Minority Group Teachers, White Teachers, Urban Schools
Lucrecia Santibañez; Cassandra M. Guarino; Robert K. Ream; Hana Kang; Yiwang Li – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
Nonstructural student mobility--school changes not tied to grade-level promotion--is common and consequential yet remains underexamined in recent research. This paper analyzes the incidence, disparities, and predictors of nonstructural school mobility using longitudinal data from six demographically diverse California school districts, with…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, School Districts, Racial Differences, Ethnicity
Dan Goldhaber; Stephanie Liddle; Rafia Nisat – Center for Education Data & Research, 2025
Do Washington state's targeted, public preschool programs help socially vulnerable students succeed in elementary school? In this study, we explore this question by examining the state's Early Childhood Education and Assistance Program (ECEAP) and the Early Support for Infants and Toddlers (ESIT) program. Using statewide censuses of…
Descriptors: School Readiness, Kindergarten, Grade 3, Elementary School Students
Edgar I. Sanchez – ACT Education Corp., 2025
This Data Byte uses data from a previous study to analyze whether indicators of having taken advanced coursework in specific subjects (i.e., English, math, science, and social studies) can reduce the negative impact of grade inflation.
Descriptors: Advanced Courses, Grade Inflation, Grade Point Average, College Freshmen
Michelle Spiegel; Leah Clark; Thurston Domina; Emily Penner; Paul Hanselman; Paul Y. Yoo; Andrew Penner – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
Children from families across the income distribution attend public schools, making schools and classrooms potential sites for interaction between more- and less-affluent children. However, limited information exists regarding the extent of economic integration in these contexts. We merge educational administrative data from Oregon with measures…
Descriptors: Family Income, Interaction, Socioeconomic Status, Peer Relationship
Emily E. N. Miller; Alejandro Schugurensky – Sociology of Education, 2025
This article investigates the racial and gender dynamics of educational inequality in suburban public schools in the United States during an era of rapid demographic change. As suburban schools transition from predominantly White enclaves to more diverse settings, it is unclear to what extent the popular narrative of "suburban advantage"…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Racial Differences, Gender Differences, Suburban Schools
Joann L. Moore; Joyce Z. Schnieders – ACT Education Corp., 2025
This study investigated the value of ACT Composite scores and high school GPA (HSGPA) in predicting first-year college GPA (FYGPA) and degree completion of students with disabilities who took the ACT with accommodations and enrolled at a two-year or four-year public institution in a single state in the southern US. Descriptive analyses found that…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Scores, Grade Point Average, High School Students
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