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Alice Dias Lopes; Jose Luis Mateos-Gonzalez; Paul Wakeling – European Journal of Education, 2024
This paper presents a descriptive analysis of the impact of tuition fee increases in England on the full-degree mobility of undergraduate students from the European Union. First, we investigated whether the increase in tuition fees reduced the number of EU students in English higher education institutions. Our analysis shows that, on average,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Tuition, Higher Education, Foreign Students
Cheslock, John J.; Riggs, Sam O. – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2023
Over the last forty years, non-elite private institutions have steadily increased listed tuition and institutional aid. This practice has continued even though the net tuition revenue gains from incoming students have become minimal. We present a new explanation for why these yearly increases continue: The pricing structure of non-elite privates…
Descriptors: Tuition, Private Colleges, Student Financial Aid, Income
Worsham, Rachel – Journal of Higher Education, 2023
In 2016, the North Carolina legislature implemented the North Carolina Fixed Tuition Program. This policy ensures that, once enrolled, an undergraduate student's tuition rate at any of the state's four-year public colleges will not increase for eight consecutive semesters of enrollment. While touted as an effort to increase affordability by…
Descriptors: Tuition, Public Colleges, Undergraduate Students, Paying for College
Andreas B. Vortisch – Education Economics, 2024
Despite the increasing number of students learning abroad, little is known about the way international students migrate and how policies influence their decision. This article evaluates one German state's recent policy to charge international students for tuition, while tertiary education remains free elsewhere. For my difference-in-differences…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Foreign Students, Tuition
Taylor Delaney; Dave E. Marcotte – Journal of Higher Education, 2024
How have changes in the price of enrolling full time at public 2- and 4-year colleges affected student decisions about whether and where to enroll in college? Using local differences in the growth of tuition at community colleges and public 4-year colleges, we study the impact of public higher education tuition prices on the post-secondary…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Public Colleges, Higher Education, College Enrollment
Brett Campbell – Utah System of Higher Education, 2024
Under Utah House Bill 144, some unauthorized immigrant (UI) students who attend a Utah high school are exempt from paying the non-resident cost of tuition at Utah higher education institutions. This analysis examines awards earned by undergraduates who were eligible for the HB144 waiver: UI students who attended high school in Utah. Completion…
Descriptors: State Legislation, Immigrants, College Bound Students, Tuition
Daniel Corral; James Dean Ward – Review of Higher Education, 2024
This study focuses on tuition reset policies, where colleges reduce the published sticker price by at least 5%, and in many instances, much more. We use a difference-in-differences design to examine the effect of these policies on student enrollment disaggregated by race/ethnicity and a proxy for economic disadvantage. On average, these policies…
Descriptors: Student Costs, Tuition, Private Colleges, Bachelors Degrees
Jeremy Wright-Kim – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
Community college baccalaureates (CCBs) provide an affordable pathway to baccalaureate-level education but increasing tuition rates present a potential financial barrier for students. Institutional aid as a cost-constraining mechanism has historically been less utilized in the 2-year sector when compared to traditional 4-year institutions. Yet,…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Bachelors Degrees, Student Costs, Ability
Sarah V. Diehl – ProQuest LLC, 2024
With tuition increasing at a faster rate than inflation, many college students depend on grants to access education. The largest of these, the federally funded Pell Grant, subsidizes over 30 billion a year worth of tuition for eligible students (Cardona, 2023) yet no longer meets its goal of covering 75% percent of tuition costs. While the…
Descriptors: Community College Students, Federal Aid, Grants, Eligibility
Rentocchini, Francesco; Rizzo, Ugo – Studies in Higher Education, 2023
This study analyses the effect of a change of focus in a traditional mission (teaching) of higher education institutions (HEIs) on the variety and intensity of knowledge exchange (KE) activities. In doing so, it bridges two partially disconnected streams of the literature in science and innovation focusing on HEI missions and heterogeneity in HEI…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Institutional Mission, Competition
Al-Labadi, Luai; Hur, Jinyoung; Lim, Kyuson; Srivastava, Nitya – Higher Education Studies, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic poses financial challenges for students worldwide, especially for those in higher education where free and universal access is not guaranteed. Students in developed economies, a long-neglected group for pandemic studies, are not exceptions. The motivation of this study is to examine subjective financial well-being of…
Descriptors: Financial Literacy, Well Being, Undergraduate Students, COVID-19
Robert L. Tucker – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The purpose of this quantitative correlational-predictive study was to determine to what extent, if any, instructional costs and student services costs together and separately predict retention rates in the state of Texas in private postsecondary institutions. Based on Tinto's theory of institutional departure, the predictor variables were…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Paying for College, Tuition, Student Costs
Amy Y. Li; Patricia Katri – Journal of Higher Education, 2025
We evaluate whether the Bennett Hypothesis applies to local-level, single-institution promise programs and account for whether colleges have the authority to raise tuition, versus an external entity holding such authority. Using a sample of 29 community colleges affected by promise programs, we analyze changes in tuition across years 2001-02 to…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Tuition, Student Costs, Power Structure
C. V. Dolan; Romeo Jackson; Jason C. Garvey; Amanda Davis Simpfenderfer – Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education, 2024
This study explores and examines the differences in financial resources and access to college between transgender and cisgender students. Using a quantitative criticalist lens, the authors analyzed data from the U.S. Department of Education High School Longitudinal Study (HSLS:09) and found that while trans and cisgender students attend college at…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Social Bias, Access to Education, Student Costs
Susha Roy; Heather L. Schwartz; Alexis Gable – RAND Corporation, 2024
Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) are government-funded accounts typically established for parents who opt not to enroll their children in public kindergarten through grade 12 (K--12) schools. ESAs allow parents to spend funds that the state would have spent for their student to attend their local public school on a broad array of educational…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Parent Financial Contribution, Academic Achievement, Elementary Secondary Education