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Jackson, Victoria; Williams, Brittani – Education Trust, 2022
Forty-five million Americans collectively owe $1.7 trillion in student loan debt, and women hold nearly two-thirds of it. Black borrowers are the group most negatively affected by student loans, in large part because of systemic racism, the inequitable distribution of wealth, a stratified labor market, and rising college costs. Because Black women…
Descriptors: African American Students, Females, Experience, Debt (Financial)
Jackson, Victoria; Williams, Brittani; Mustaffa, Jalil B. – Education Trust, 2023
Approximately 43 million Americans collectively owe $1.5 trillion in federal student loan debt, but students aren't the only ones drowning in student debt. Increasingly, parents, particularly Black parents, are taking out Parent PLUS (Parent Loans for Undergraduate Students) loans and putting off retirement to help their children pay for college.…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Financial Aid Applicants, Parents, Undergraduate Study
Mustaffa, Jalil B.; Davis, Jonathan C. W. – Education Trust, 2021
Student debt has been a crisis for years, and the pandemic has only exacerbated matters for many borrowers. This is especially true for Black borrowers, who are among those most negatively affected by student loans -- due, in large part, to systemic racism, the inequitable distribution of wealth in this country, a stratified labor market, and…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, African American Students, Debt (Financial), Racial Discrimination
Jackson, Victoria; Mustaffa, Jalil B. – Education Trust, 2022
Student debt is growing, as is the mental health crisis among Black borrowers. While the situation is dire, it is also a byproduct of failed and intentionally racist policies going back generations, which means it can be solved by better public policies. This brief is the second in a four-part series using qualitative data from the National Black…
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Mental Health, African American Students, Student Loan Programs
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
Anthony, Marshall, Jr.; Nichols, Andrew H.; Schak, J. Oliver – Education Trust, 2019
For millions of college-going students, one of the most urgent concerns is the rising cost of college and how to pay for it -- and not just for tuition but other necessities like textbooks, housing, food, and transportation. The idea that one can work one's way through college with a minimum-wage job is, in most cases, a myth. Students from…
Descriptors: Low Income Students, College Students, College Bound Students, Public Colleges
Jones, Tiffany; Ramirez-Mendoza, Jaime; Jackson, Victoria – Education Trust, 2020
Free college programs have been around for some time, but they have proliferated in recent years, prompted by rising college costs, mounting student debt, and the United States' urgent need for a more educated workforce. But while these free college, or "promise" programs have the potential to make a higher education more affordable and…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Debt (Financial), Program Descriptions, State Policy
Education Trust, 2013
America's financial-aid system has become almost impossible to navigate and burdensome for those who need it most. Tuition and fees are skyrocketing, forcing almost half of college-going students to borrow. Low and middle-income students are taking on frightening levels of debt. Bachelor's degree recipients leave school with an average of $26,600…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Student Financial Aid, Federal Programs, Federal Government
Dannenberg, Michael; Voight, Mamie – Education Trust, 2013
America's college financial-aid system has helped millions of students obtain a postsecondary education, but the system's flaws are increasingly apparent. Growth in tuition and fees outpace available resources, particularly for students striving to rise out of poverty. Low- and middle-income students confront frightening levels of education debt.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Student Financial Aid, Federal Programs, Federal Government
Lynch, Mamie; Engle, Jennifer; Cruz, Jose L. – Education Trust, 2010
As with the collapse of the subprime lending industry, the showdown between for-profit colleges and the government shows how the aspirations of the underserved, when combined with lax regulation, make the rich, richer and the poor, poorer. For-profit colleges provide high-cost degree programs that have little chance of leading to high-paying…
Descriptors: Proprietary Schools, Educational Finance, Student Educational Objectives, Access to Education