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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
Tonya Jeffries – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The purpose of this quantitative ex post facto study was to understand if select student characteristics (student status, age, gender, Pell status) predicted student success. In this study, student success is defined as acceptance into a dental hygiene program and completion of a dental hygiene program for Black students at a community college.…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, African American Students, Dentistry, Community College Students
Alejandra C. Sosa Pieroni – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The long-term financial viability of private higher education has been a topic of concern for some time, with experts predicting their decline. This concern has been exacerbated by declining enrollment, mounting deficits, and a wave of closures among small private institutions. Demographic changes, including declining high school graduate…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Student Characteristics, College Students, Money Management
Sandy Baum; Jason Cohn – Urban Institute, 2023
Funding for community colleges varies significantly, even within the same state. Several factors account for these differences, including more generous funding for smaller institutions to compensate for their higher costs per student, unequal local funding from property tax revenues, and political forces. In theory, this variation could lead to…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Financial Support, African American Students, Hispanic American Students
Cook, Bryan; Tilsley, Alexandra – Urban Institute, 2022
In August, the Biden administration announced a plan to forgive up to $10,000 in federal student loans for almost all borrowers, with up to an extra $10,000 for borrowers who had received Pell grants. The additional forgiveness for Pell borrowers intends to address the racial wealth gap, as Black and Hispanic students are more likely to receive…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Loan Repayment, Federal Aid, Grants
Ariel Jackson Davis – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Black, First-Generation, and Pell Grant recipient college students have faced tremendous obstacles and overcame substantial hurdles as a worldwide health pandemic, the novel coronavirus or COVID-19, disproportionately harmed the students, their family members, and communities. With over 1,000,000 deaths in the United States at the time of…
Descriptors: African American Students, First Generation College Students, COVID-19, Police Community Relationship
Christian Michael Smith; Laura T. Hamilton; Charlie Eaton – Institute for College Access & Success, 2024
Current formulas for awarding federal student financial aid are based primarily on income and don't fully account for wealth inequality, especially by race. Students from low-income and low-wealth families--who are disproportionately Black and Latine--often have to take out more student loans to attend college. Inevitably, without family wealth to…
Descriptors: Federal Aid, Student Financial Aid, Low Income Students, African American Students
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Vivian Yuen Ting Liu; Rachel Yang Zhou; Jordan Matsudaira – Education Finance and Policy, 2025
The Pell Grant, while offering substantial financial support for low-income students pursuing higher education, historically covered only the costs of two full-time semesters per year and did not include assistance for summer courses. Research has consistently demonstrated that continuous enrollment throughout the academic year enhances college…
Descriptors: Federal Aid, Grants, College Students, Paying for College
Edwards, Nigel D. – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This study examined retention and First-Year GPA for all FTIC students, Black students, and Black Pell-eligible students at the UOTSE as a function of participation in a First-Year Seminar Course. A statistically significant relationship was determined to exist between First-year GPA and participation in the FYS course. For retention, participants…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Blacks, African American Students, Grade Point Average
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Olga Rodriguez; Daniel Payares-Montoya; Kevin Cook – Grantee Submission, 2024
The pandemic created daunting challenges for higher education. The federal government provided California Community Colleges billions of dollars in aid for students and institutions. How did they use these funds? How well did their pandemic recovery activities and investments help reengage students? What will institutions do when the money runs…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Federal Aid, COVID-19, Pandemics
Rachel Carly Feldman; Johanna S. Quinn; Alannah S. Caisey; Carol Chen – NORC at the University of Chicago, 2024
The Partnership for College Completion (PCC) was founded to "advance equity in higher education" by supporting colleges and universities to improve college completion for Black, Latinx, and Pell-eligible students--those groups that experience persistent disparities in completion. Simultaneously, PCC engages in state policy reform to…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Educational Policy, Higher Education, Partnerships in Education
Melissa Whatley; Frim Ampaw; Jemilia S. Davis – Belk Center for Community College Leadership and Research, 2021
To meet the demands of a growing knowledge economy, North Carolina must address a history of exclusion that has disproportionately impacted Black/African American, Hispanic/Latinx, and American Indian communities and individuals who earn low wages by intentionally creating conditions that develop talent within these communities. This report…
Descriptors: Community College Students, Transfer Students, Demography, Educational Attainment
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Alice L. Daugherty; Stephen G. Katsinas; Noel Keeney – Journal of Education Finance, 2022
The Pell Grant is the foundational need-based student aid program in the United States, providing students of lower socio-economic status a pathway to afford college costs and educational expenses. Currently, over one-third of all U.S. undergraduate students receive Pell. This paper examines federal Pell assistance and institutional costs for…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Public Colleges, Regional Schools, Grants
America Yolanda Lopez – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Purpose: The overall purpose of this journal-ready dissertation centered on community college students in Texas, was to determine the degree to which changes had occurred in upward transfer rates. The first specific purpose was to establish the degree to which changes had occurred in upward transfer rates for Asian, Black, Hispanic, and White…
Descriptors: Community College Students, College Transfer Students, Transfer Rates (College), Minority Group Students
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Smith, Andre; Kant, Sudarsan – Journal of Negro Education, 2021
Harris-Stowe State University is a relatively small university located in Missouri's largest metropolitan area. Yet the students at Harris-Stowe are clearly different from the students at the other eleven Missouri public universities. The student body of Harris-Stowe is predominantly African American, over 85 percent. Harris-Stowe State University…
Descriptors: State Universities, African American Students, College Students, State Aid
Jackson, Victoria; Mustaffa, Jalil B. – Education Trust, 2022
Black students are more likely to take on debt, borrow higher amounts, and struggle with repayment than their peers, because they generally have fewer resources to pay for college, thanks to the ongoing generational effects of systemic racism. This debt burden has far-reaching financial consequences, and many Black borrowers are unable to afford…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, African American Students, Debt (Financial), Racial Discrimination
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