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Jyotsna Pattnaik; Mary Lopez – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
The impact of COVID-19, both in quality and quantity, on the field of early childhood education, ECE is immeasurable. However, as research shows, its impact on family child care (FCC), has been worse than other sectors of ECE. FCC providers worldwide have always perceived their work as a service to families and children, yet FCC homes have not…
Descriptors: Child Care, COVID-19, Pandemics, Child Caregivers
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Devon L. Graves – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2025
Community college students must navigate complex financial aid policies and procedures to obtain their aid award. In this study, I investigated how Students of Color at a community college experience financial aid disbursements. Through qualitative interviews, I found that community colleges disburse aid to students through a process I define as…
Descriptors: Community College Students, Minority Group Students, Student Financial Aid, Resource Allocation
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Llamas, Jasmin; Malik, Vidur; McKenzie, Matthew R.; Blackburn, Casey; Hendricks, Kathryn; Marinsek, Danielle; Sia, Marissa; Marquez, Rebecca – Journal of The First-Year Experience & Students in Transition, 2020
The Latinx population continues to be underrepresented in higher education.This qualitative study explored the perceptions of 137 Latinx first-year students on factors that affected their college adjustment. Two primary domains emerged through consensual qualitative research analysis: (a) Detrimental Factors (i.e., issues that hindered adjustment)…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Hispanic American Students, Student Adjustment, Student Attitudes
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Dylan Hawksworth-Lutzow; Heather Rose – Journal of Education Finance, 2023
This paper examines how school districts change teacher salaries in response to large changes in revenue. Using district-level salary schedule data for nearly all California school districts, we analyze two time periods: one with a decrease in funding (2007-08 to 2011-12 marked by the Great Recession) and one with a significant increase in funding…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, School Districts, Educational Finance, Funding Formulas
National Education Association, 2023
Last summer, the National Education Association (NEA) developed a New Business Item to explore retrenchment: "The NEA shall make a statistical study on the effect of significant faculty retrenchment at community colleges on future faculty cuts" (NBI 78, 2022). ASA Research (ASA) conducted exploratory research in an attempt to identify…
Descriptors: Retrenchment, Faculty Mobility, Employment Practices, College Faculty
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Kawasaki, Jarod – New Educator, 2023
Efforts to recruit teachers of color during the ongoing teacher shortage in the United States have largely failed evidenced by the increasing diversity gap between students of color and teachers of color. This study focuses on one barrier to recruiting teachers of color, a traditional student teaching model that is equivalent to a semester to a…
Descriptors: Teacher Recruitment, Minority Group Teachers, Teacher Shortage, Barriers
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Brett Fischer; Catie Lott; Evan White – California Policy Lab, 2025
The student loan payment pause ended two years ago as of September 2025, but borrowers were given a one-year "on-ramp" to resume payments. In April, the Department of Education announced that collections on student loans would start again. The California Policy Lab's prior work found that a large portion of borrowers were likely to…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Debt (Financial), Loan Repayment, Loan Default
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Benjamin D. Andrews; Tori Rehr; Erica P. Regan – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
In a time of increasing economic inequality, lower levels of government investment in higher education, and rising tuition costs, students vying for a college degree experience financial concerns as important influences on their college experience. An emerging body of literature has focused on the relationship between student finances and academic…
Descriptors: Community College Students, Stress Variables, Financial Problems, Outcomes of Education
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Dayne, Nancy; Jung, Youngok; Roy, Roudi – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2023
College student parents are a unique population not always heard on college campuses. The current study reports the voice of student parents and their challenges in pursuing higher education, while raising children at a 4-year Hispanic Serving Institution. Seven hundred and eighty-six student parents participated, among whom 54% were Hispanic (n =…
Descriptors: College Students, Parents, Nontraditional Students, Higher Education
Carol Burris – Network for Public Education, 2024
Studies of charter closure rates typically focus on year-to-year closures. While important for researchers, such studies provide little guidance to families seeking to understand the risk of enrolling their child in a charter school. That is because studies determining how many schools close each year provide no information on how long the school…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, School Closing, School Choice, Trend Analysis
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Montanari, Simona; Vogel, Ron; Vasquez, Melinda – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2023
This study explores the demographic/background, academic, and environmental factors that predicted student retention after stopping out at a large Hispanic-serving institution in Southern California. The results show that (a) gender, (b) academic background, experience, readiness, and performance, and (c) personal and financial issues predicted…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, College Students, Institutional Characteristics, Student Characteristics
Sherrie Reed; Elizabeth Friedmann; Michal Kurlaender; Paco Martorell; Derek Rury; Ryan Fuller; Jessica Moldoff; Patrick Perry – Grantee Submission, 2022
This paper documents the experience of California college students in the midst of the pandemic as their academic and home lives were disrupted. The analysis relies on a survey sent to all financial aid applicants statewide. Survey respondents include nearly 100,000 students enrolled in both two-year and four-year postsecondary institutions.…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, COVID-19, Pandemics, Higher Education
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Lake, Robin; Jochim, Ashley; Hill, Paul; Tuchman, Sivan – Center on Reinventing Public Education, 2019
The claim that charter schools cause financial harm to school districts is a major element in the debate around charter schools in California. Critics allege that enrollment in charter schools drains resources from school districts, forcing them to make cuts to staff and services and eventually contributing to fiscal distress. The charge that…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Financial Problems, School Districts, Enrollment
Desiree Zuniga – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This qualitative study explored the challenges and experiences of part-time enrolled Latina students moving through a Hispanic-serving California community College (HSCCC). Grounded in Schlossberg's transition theory, the 4 S system, and Latino critical race theory (LatCrit), the study captures the testimonios of 12 testimonialistas to examine…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Females, Part Time Students, Community College Students
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Jacquelyn Chin; Samantha Mattis; Josceline Acosta; Amaranta Ramirez; David Rivera; Adrian Valadez; Kathleen Baca Leanos; Isaiah Jones; Alison Cerezo – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
The coronavirus (COVID-19) global pandemic upended the academic trajectories and opportunities of many community college students in the United States. While four-year universities have seen an uptick in applications in the 2021-2022 academic year, community colleges have experienced a sharp decrease in enrollment, signifying significant…
Descriptors: Community College Students, Student Financial Aid, COVID-19, Pandemics
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