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Perkins, Hugh V.; Robertson-Tchabo, Elizabeth A. – Educational Gerontology, 1981
Evaluated the tuition waiver program for retirees enrolled at the University of Maryland College Park. Findings suggests that a tuition waiver program serves the need of retirees to remain intellectually active, to explore academic areas, and to develop new or improve existing skills and interests. (Author)
Descriptors: Adult Development, Educational Experience, Educational Gerontology, Interests
Freeman, Paul – Agricultural Education, 1979
Discusses income tax deductions for vocational agriculture teachers for expenses incurred through automobiles used for school business, course work expenses, professional dues, classroom supplies, books, cost of bus driving license, liability insurance, and special clothing. A specific example for claiming the deductions on an automobile is…
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, Costs, Expenditures, Fees
Burd, Stephen – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
After four months of work, a national panel studying why colleges cost so much has reached the conclusion that American higher education is, for the most part, a bargain. Republicans originally asked the commission to focus on cost containment. The commission's membership is dominated by educators. Panel recommendations emphasize explaining to…
Descriptors: Access to Education, College Administration, Disclosure, Education Work Relationship
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Griswold, Carolyn P.; Marine, Ginger Minton – Review of Higher Education, 1996
Comparison of five proposals to change state higher education tuition and aid policies suggests that tuition and aid must be explicitly linked for efficient and equitable results. However, it is extremely difficult to adopt explicitly linked policies. The findings support critics who warn that attempts to adopt high-tuition/high-aid policies will…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Comparative Analysis, Educational Equity (Finance), Higher Education
Hartle, Terry W. – Trusteeship, 1996
A July 1996 public opinion poll shows that Americans, particularly those likely to have children reaching college age, sharply overestimate the cost of a college education. As a result, some may not explore financing possibilities further. College officials must be more direct with the public about the economic realities of higher education. (MSE)
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, Educational Economics, Higher Education, Information Dissemination
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Conrad, Clifton F.; Eagan, David J. – Thought and Action, 1989
Consequences for institutional quality when playing the Prestige Game are examined. Six behaviors that characterize participation in the Prestige Game are identified: recruiting star faculty, tightening admissions standards, raising tuition, reforming curriculum, building partnerships with business, and institutional imaging. (MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, College Admission, College Faculty, Curriculum Development
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Lewis, Gwendolyn L. – Research in Higher Education, 1989
The aggregate financing of student aid by the federal government, state governments, and institutions over the past 25 years is discussed. Trends in the composition of aid delivered (grants, loans, and work study) are described. Over time comparisons in the numbers of recipients and aid per recipient are given by programs. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Finance, Federal Aid, Grants
Johnson, Sandra L; Meyerson, Joel W. – Trusteeship, 1994
The five institutional issues rated most important for 1994 by college trustees, presidents, and other leaders include tuition policy and financing; planning and budgeting needs and processes; productivity and cost control; establishing and fine-tuning institutional mission and strategy; and directions in charitable giving. (MSE)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Budgeting, College Planning, College Presidents
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Stoffer, David – Journal of College Admission, 1995
An economic squeeze is being placed on colleges and universities through reduced federal and state aid to education. Discusses the history of financial aid, who is considered needy, whether accepting a student loan is wise, the new Direct Loan program, prepayment loans, using college debt to your advantage, and future trends in financial aid. (JBJ)
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Eligibility, Financial Needs, Higher Education
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Leslie, Larry L. – Journal for Higher Education Management, 1995
A new set of dynamics in the financing of higher education is reviewed, beginning in the 1970s with development of federal policy supporting high tuition and increased student financial aid. Implications of this policy for the future are examined from the perspective of the resource dependency theory. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Administration, Economic Change, Educational Finance, Educational History
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Shannon, Michael C.; Schnobrich, Kathleen – American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, 1991
Data from 249 providers of pharmacy continuing education and for 6,670 programs for 1989 are summarized and compared with data from 1980 and 1985. Results show more providers, a 2.5-fold increase in programs offered, slightly lower tuition per program, continued decrease in program length, and increased availability of correspondence programs.…
Descriptors: College Credits, Correspondence Study, Costs, Course Content
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Harvey, James – Educational Record, 1992
America's economic difficulties, and therefore higher education's fiscal problems, will not respond quickly to change. Institutions must look for additional revenue sources, including tuition, philanthropy, and increased enrollment. Colleges need to acknowledge the reality of the situation, define missions carefully, make hard choices, address…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, College Role, Economic Change, Educational Finance
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St. John, Edward P. – Research in Higher Education, 1990
A study of the influence of student aid awards and tuition charged on year-to-year persistence by college students in the high school class of 1980 shows persistence decisions in the early 1980s more responsive to aid than tuition increases, suggesting persistence might improve with increased need-based aid alongside tuition increases. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Students, Decision Making, Economic Change
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Abbott, Frank C. – Journal of Optometric Education, 1994
A discussion of the financing of health professions education looks at a variety of influences, including enrollment change over the last few decades, federal involvement, growth in higher education, drops in federal and state support and the impact on costs borne by students. Possible directions are examined. (MSE)
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Educational Finance, Enrollment Trends, Federal Government
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St. John, Edward P. – Journal of Higher Education, 1993
A study analyzed the impact of college tuition and student aid changes in the 1980s on enrollment, using price-response measures to examine why total enrollment remained stable while low-income enrollment declined. The technique is found useful for explaining the consequences of price policy choices. (MSE)
Descriptors: Educational Economics, Educational Trends, Enrollment Influences, Enrollment Projections
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