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Indiana Career and Postsecondary Advancement Center, Bloomington. – 1998
This paper includes tips on managing time and controlling anxiety for adults who want to go to college. The paper encourages adults to take the step of going to college and reminds them of the benefits of an education. Suggestions include the following: planning, preparing the family, thinking about priorities, knowing what to expect to gain from…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Anxiety, College Students, Educational Benefits
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bourner, Tom – Higher Education Review, 1979
The impact of completing a part-time degree course by one year of full-time study on the personal finances of the students is explored. Analysis indicates that students can normally increase their net incomes during the period of full-time study. (JMF)
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Degree Requirements, Educational Economics, Educational Finance
Hansen, W. Lee – 1985
Reasons for the increasing numbers of independent college students are considered, with attention to the provision for independent students in the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant (Pell) program. The availability of grants to independent students may have two consequences: college students under age 22 with access to parental resources might…
Descriptors: Age, College Students, Definitions, Dependents
College Entrance Examination Board, New York, NY. Coll. Scholarship Service. – 1985
Issues in student financial need analysis are considered, based on the work of the Committee on Standards of Ability to Pay (CSAP) of the College Scholarship Service. The three major sections of the paper concern: CSAP's preliminary recommendations for changes in the 1986-1987 Uniform Methodology; a review of some of the methodological issues that…
Descriptors: College Students, Dependents, Eligibility, Financial Needs
Comptroller General of the U.S., Washington, DC. – 1985
The distribution of Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (SEOG) funds was investigated by the General Accounting Office. The SEOG program is a campus-based aid program that provides money to schools, which then distribute it to students. Attention was directed to the following concerns: the kinds of schools that receive SEOG funds, the…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, College Students, Dependents, Family Income
Kuchak, JoAnn – 1976
Application forms for the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant (BEOG) Program for 1974-1975 were compared to Internal Revenue Service (IRA) tax forms to determine the scope of applicants' misreporting and to identify categories of applicants who tend to misreport. A total of 70,063 tax forms and BEOG records from eligible and ineligible applicants…
Descriptors: Accountability, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Dependents
American Council on Education, Washington, DC. Policy Analysis Service. – 1975
During the spring of 1974 a series of seminars on student aid programs and student access was held in connection with the congressional hearings on Title IV of the Higher Education Act. This seminar report on four new concepts for facilitating student access seeks to communicate some of the critical issues and concerns raised by the participants…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Federal Aid, Higher Education, Postsecondary Education
Hanson, David J. – 1975
The impact of lowered age of majority on higher education is discussed in this report. After reviewing the concept of majority and related principles of constitutional law, four areas of possible impact are considered. The first section deals with the determination of financial need for the independent adult student, the second with the question…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Age, Age Groups, College Students
Kendis, Kurt L. – College Board Review, 1978
Silber's proposed Tuition Advance Fund for undergraduate student financial aid is criticized. It is suggested that what the TAF would do is substitute the student's borrowing from the government for what the parents now contribute to higher educaiton. (LBH)
Descriptors: Access to Education, College Students, Educational Legislation, Eligibility
Wagner, Alan P.; Carlson, Nancy – 1983
Current federal definitions and proposed alternative definitions of financially independent students, and the effect of the definitions on the numbers and attributes of independent students, are reviewed. Current federal law defines financial aid applicants as financially independent of their parents if they meet three criteria (the "tri-form"…
Descriptors: Age, College Students, Definitions, Eligibility
Bureau of Student Financial Assistance (DHEW/OE), Washington, DC. – 1978
A status report for the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant Program (Basic Grant Program) for the 1976-1977 academic year is presented. Information is provided on: applicants for the 1976-1977 year; program trends for academic years 1973-1974 through 1976-1977; the number of Basic Grant recipients and nonqualifying applicants for 1976-1977 by…
Descriptors: Annual Reports, College Students, Dependents, Eligibility
Rutgers, The State Univ., New Brunswick, NJ. Eagleton Inst. of Politics. – 1987
In fall 1986, the Center for Public Interest Polling at the Eagleton Institute of Politics conducted a study of the educational objectives, attitudes, characteristics, and plans of students enrolled in New Jersey's 19 community and county colleges. Interviews were conducted with 2,100 randomly selected students. Study findings included the…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Course Evaluation, Parent Financial Contribution, Participant Satisfaction
Fenske, Robert; And Others – 1985
A study of unmet student financial need in Washington State was conducted by the Washington Council for Postsecondary Education. "Unmet need" is the difference between need and the total amount of aid received by the student through federal, state, and institutional financial aid programs, privately funded scholarships, and nonsubsidized…
Descriptors: College Students, Dependents, Financial Needs, Higher Education
Silber, John R. – College Board Review, 1978
A proposed Tuition Advance Fund is advocated as a solution to the student financial aid and loan default problem for undergraduate students in degree programs at accredited institutions. Qualifying students could borrow funds for three years and repay in the future through payroll withholding or estimated tax payments. (LBH)
Descriptors: Access to Education, College Students, Educational Legislation, Eligibility
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Weis, Lois – Urban Review, 1985
Utilizing ethnographic data, three dimensions of the experience of Black females attending community colleges are explored: (1) motivation for attending; (2) perceived behavior of women and men within the institution; (3) academic outcomes. Explanations are offered for characteristics of Black female culture and community colleges' failure to…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Black Students, Community Colleges, Outcomes of Education
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