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Youngwan Song; Ross Rubenstein – Research in Higher Education, 2024
While considerable evidence has accumulated on state-funded merit-based scholarships, research on the effects of specific scholarship design choices has been thin, perhaps in part because cross-state comparisons are difficult. As one of the only states to enact major changes in the design of its merit-based scholarship program, Georgia provides a…
Descriptors: College Choice, Scholarships, High School Graduates, Program Design
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Leigh, Elaine W.; González Canché, Manuel S. – Research in Higher Education, 2021
Place-based scholarships within the College Promise movement reduce the cost of college for students in particular places and often include incentives for families to live in places for a longer period of time to capture full program benefits. This financial incentive may change the residential mobility decisions of people living in and around…
Descriptors: Scholarships, College Students, Migration, Place of Residence
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Whatley, Melissa – Research in Higher Education, 2019
This study employs difference-in-differences estimation to explore the relationship between the implementation of state merit-aid programs and students' participation in study abroad. The relationship between implementation of these financial aid programs and study abroad participation has not been tested explicitly in prior policy or education…
Descriptors: State Aid, Merit Scholarships, State Programs, Study Abroad
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Tong Li; Leticia Oseguera; Chris Kirk – Research in Higher Education, 2024
This study applies an adapted Tripartite Integration Model of Social Influences (TIMSI) framework to investigate the socialization experiences of undergraduate students participating in the STEM Scholars Program (SSP), with a particular focus on the relationship between first-generation status and STEM socialization. A sample of N = 193 students…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Undergraduate Students, First Generation College Students, Social Status
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Johnson, Iryna – Research in Higher Education, 2022
When institutions introduce financial aid policies, researchers have an opportunity to study these policies within the framework of a natural experiment. For this methodological note, I use a natural experiment that occurred at the public university when institutional scholarship for all first-time freshmen meeting a minimum high school grade…
Descriptors: Merit Scholarships, School Holding Power, Student Financial Aid, College Freshmen
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Birch, Matthew; Rosenman, Robert – Research in Higher Education, 2019
Merit aid is an increasingly important component of college scholarships, but policymakers are concerned that merit aid is often given to students who would enroll anyway. As a baseline we use a regression discontinuity (RD) framework to test an institution-level merit aid program at a public research university and find that the merit aid program…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, College Attendance, Enrollment, College Students
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Chan, Roy Y. – Research in Higher Education, 2022
Credit momentum policies, or performance-based financial aid policies, have become increasingly popular among policymakers seeking to improve degree completion rates. This paper examines Indiana's 30-credit-hour completion policy on first-time, full-time students who receive the Twenty-First Century Scholars (TFCS) Promise Program. Using…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, State Policy, College Credits, College Students
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Kramer, Dennis A.; Ortagus, Justin C.; Lacy, T. Austin – Research in Higher Education, 2018
The notion of merit-aid is not a new development in higher education. Although previous researchers have demonstrated the impact of state-adopted merit-aid funding on student decision-making, fewer studies have examined institutional pricing responses to broad-based merit-aid policies. Using a generalized difference-in-difference approach, we…
Descriptors: Tuition, Student Financial Aid, Higher Education, Merit Scholarships
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Webber, Karen L.; González Canché, Manuel – Research in Higher Education, 2018
With a focus on possible gender differences, this study used 2003-2013 data from the "Survey of Doctorate Recipients" to examine individual, institutional, and early employment factors that contribute to career paths of recent doctorates who enter postsecondary academic appointments. Findings showed some noteworthy differences by gender…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Doctoral Degrees, Institutional Characteristics, Individual Characteristics
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Carpenter, Dick M., II; Kaka, Sarah J.; Tygret, Jennifer A.; Cathcart, Katy – Research in Higher Education, 2018
This study examines the efficacy of a scholarship program designed to assist single parent, post-freshmen, full time undergraduate students and predictors of success among a sample of said students, where success is defined as progress toward completion, academic achievement, and degree completion. Results of fixed effects regression and…
Descriptors: Scholarship, One Parent Family, Undergraduate Students, Hierarchical Linear Modeling
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Harrington, James R.; Muñoz, José; Curs, Bradley R.; Ehlert, Mark – Research in Higher Education, 2016
The adoption of state-funded merit-based aid programs has become increasingly popular among policy-makers, particularly in the southeastern part of the United States. One of the primary rationales of state-funded merit-based aid is to provide scholarships to the best and brightest students as a means to retain high quality human capital in the…
Descriptors: Brain Drain, State Aid, Merit Scholarships, Regression (Statistics)
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Zhang, Liang; Hu, Shouping; Sensenig, Victor – Research in Higher Education, 2013
In this study, we investigate the impact of the Bright Futures Scholarship Program on college enrollment and degree production in Florida by using IPEDS enrollment, migration, and completion data. Results suggest large and significant enrollment effects at Florida's public 4- and 2-year institutions, for both full-time and part-time enrollment.…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, State Programs, Merit Scholarships, Enrollment
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Boatman, Angela; Long, Bridget Terry – Research in Higher Education, 2016
While increasing numbers of students have gained access to higher education during the last several decades, postsecondary persistence and academic success remain serious concerns with only about half of college entrants completing degrees. Given concerns about affordability and resources, policymakers and administrators wonder how financial aid…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Scholarships, Undergraduate Students, Minority Group Students
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Domina, Thurston – Research in Higher Education, 2014
Twenty-one US states currently offer some form of merit-based postsecondary financial aid, although the generosity and eligibility requirements of merit aid programs varies from state to state. This article uses nationally representative data from high school students in the early 1990s and the early 2000s to evaluate the relationship between the…
Descriptors: Merit Scholarships, State Programs, Program Design, High School Students
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Schudde, Lauren; Scott-Clayton, Judith – Research in Higher Education, 2016
The Federal Pell Grant Program is the nation's largest need-based grant program. While students' initial eligibility for the Pell is based on financial need, renewal is contingent on meeting minimum academic standards similar to those in models of performance-based scholarships, including a grade point average (GPA) requirement and ratio of…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Grants, Scholarships, Academic Achievement
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