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Showing 1 to 15 of 461 results Save | Export
Vanessa Sacks; Zakia Redd; Rebecca Madill; Katherine Paschall; Sarah Her – Administration for Children & Families, 2024
School-age children need safe, supervised places to learn and grow during non-school hours while their parents and caregivers work. Beyond providing safety and supervision, participation in high-quality school-age child care programs offered before or after school, or during the summer, is associated with positive developmental outcomes for young…
Descriptors: After School Programs, Child Care, Children, Preadolescents
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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
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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
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Dawnsha R. Mushonga; Mathew C. Uretsky; Bess A. Rose; Angela K. Henneberger – Applied Developmental Science, 2024
Homeless and low-income students share multiple overlapping risk experiences; however, some studies report little to no observed differences in outcomes between these students. From the cumulative risk perspective, homelessness is perched at the extreme edge of economic insecurity, suggesting that homeless students encounter additional hardships…
Descriptors: Homeless People, Low Income Students, At Risk Students, Grade 6
David S. Knight; Pooya Almasi; Bre Urness-Straight; Hilary Loeb – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
School finance inequities are a key driver of disparities in educational outcomes. Higher per-pupil funding levels allow schools to provide more qualified educators, smaller class sizes, and high-quality physical resources such as modern instructional technology. We study how Washington state school districts generate and allocate funding for…
Descriptors: Access to Computers, Disadvantaged, Educational Finance, School Districts
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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
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Carvalhaes, Flavio; Senkevics, Adriano S.; Ribeiro, Carlos A. Costa – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2023
This paper investigates the intersection of income and race in structuring access to higher education among students that participate in a national high-stakes exam in Brazil. Our objectives are (1) to estimate the probability of students coming from different income strata, racial groups, and performance levels to access higher education and (2)…
Descriptors: Family Income, Racial Differences, High School Graduates, College Attendance
Mengli Song; Kristina Zeiser; Kyle Neering; Robert Schwarzhaupt; Sara Mitchell – American Institutes for Research, 2024
This report describes results from the Long-Term Impact of Early College High Schools Study--funded by the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) (#R305A210017)--which aimed to explore the long-term impacts of early college (EC) high schools on students' academic outcomes (e.g., college enrollment, degree attainment) and workforce, financial, and…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Dual Enrollment, College Preparation, High Schools
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Pamela Joshi; Abigail N. Walters; Clemens Noelke; Dolores Acevedo-Garcia – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2022
Policy debates about whether wages and benefits from work provide enough resources to achieve economic self- sufficiency rely on data for workers, not working families. Using data from the Current Population Survey, we find that almost two- thirds of families working full time earn enough to cover a basic family budget, but that less than a…
Descriptors: Family Income, Wages, Fringe Benefits, Budgets
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Hannah S. Durham; Karrah L. Bowman; Ashley J. Harrison – American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2024
Various intervention usage is associated with positive outcomes for children with autism. However, the intensity of these interventions tends to be below recommendations, especially for minoritized children. This study aimed to examine how average weekly intervention hours among children vary by sociodemographic factors. Regression analyses were…
Descriptors: Intervention, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Children, Minority Groups
Lindsey I. Black; Nazik Elgaddal – National Center for Health Statistics, 2024
Chronic school absenteeism can lead to poorer academic performance and school engagement for students. It is also a risk factor for school dropout, which is associated with many long-term health impacts. This report uses data from the 2022 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) to describe the percentage of children ages 5-17 who experienced…
Descriptors: Attendance, Children, Adolescents, Elementary Secondary Education
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Karen C. Stoiber; Christie A. Ruehl; Kyle K. Landry; Alex A. Smith; Cheryl L. Brosig – School Psychology, 2024
Children with chronic illnesses present unique health, psychosocial, and learning challenges. Due to the complexities surrounding their needs, these children and their families often encounter multilayered barriers when accessing educational services and health care management. Medical-family-school interprofessional interagency collaborations…
Descriptors: Chronic Illness, Minority Group Students, Low Income Students, At Risk Persons
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Rebecca Bier – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2024
Background: Socioeconomic gaps in children's academic and social skills are large upon Kindergarten entry (von Hippel, Workman, and Downey 2018; Reardon 2011; Reardon and Portilla 2016). Preschool programs may yield particularly large benefits to low-income students and racially minoritized groups and may be promising for reducing inequalities…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Socioeconomic Status, Kindergarten, Low Income Students
Kamala C. Kiem – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The study addresses the widening income and racial access gap in higher education resulting from enrollment management teams' operationalization of academic capitalism. The study focuses on the local, micro level, emphasizing how enrollment management leadership teams make sense of enrollment management, recognizing that enrollment management and…
Descriptors: Enrollment Management, Higher Education, Racial Differences, Access to Education
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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
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