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F. King Alexander; Stephen G. Katsinas; Noel E. Keeney; Nathaniel J. Bray – Journal of Education Finance, 2023
Many important issues are being debated including but not limited to student debt reduction, a national policy for K-14 that may include free community college education, and the creation of new federal funding policies in the form of federal matching or maintenance of effort policies that hold state legislatures more accountable for maintaining…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Public Colleges, Paying for College, Educational Finance
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Avery M. D. Davis – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2025
Many students work during college to offset rising costs, but significant time on the job affects postsecondary outcomes. Analyzing the High School Longitudinal Study (N = 4,418), this article estimates the effects of hours worked on grades, credits earned, persistence, stopping out (i.e., unenrolling for 5 months before reenrolling), and dropping…
Descriptors: Student Employment, Working Hours, Grades (Scholastic), College Credits
Daniel H. Cooper; Maddie Haddix – Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2025
Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, the Trump administration paused federal student loan payments and interest accruals as a temporary relief measure for borrowers. The pause covered roughly 90 percent of all outstanding student loans, affecting about 38 million individuals, who collectively held a balance of $1.5 trillion. For each of the 17 million…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Loan Repayment, Public Policy, Federal Aid
Kristin Blagg; Moriah Macklin – Urban Institute, 2025
In this essay, the authors examine a congressional proposal -- the Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA) -- to allow taxpayers to redirect their federal tax dollars to organizations that would provide funding for students to enroll in private school or to help pay for outside educational supports. Based on the implementation of similar…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Legislation, School Choice, Private Schools
Chris Edwards – Cato Institute, 2025
The US Department of Agriculture runs a large array of farm and food subsidy programs. The school lunch and breakfast programs are two of the largest, which together with related school food programs will cost federal taxpayers an estimated $35 billion in 2025. Thirty million children, about 58 percent of students in public schools, receive school…
Descriptors: Lunch Programs, Breakfast Programs, Food, Public Schools
David Casalaspi; Marisa Mission; Hailly T. N. Korman – Bellwether, 2025
High-impact tutoring is a research-based approach to providing individualized instruction for students and accelerating learning. It was one of the most popular uses of federal Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) dollars, with 10 states spending a portion of their funding on large-scale tutoring initiatives. Illinois was one…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Tutors, Program Effectiveness, Individualized Instruction
Kelly Robson Foster; Teresa Mooney – Bellwether, 2025
As of the 2022-23 school year (SY), approximately 1.37 million pre-K through Grade 12 students in the United States -- nearly 3% of the total pre-K through Grade 12 population -- were identified as experiencing homelessness. Homelessness affects a diverse range of young people across America. Students experiencing homelessness often face far…
Descriptors: Homeless People, State Policy, State Aid, Public Policy
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Brett Fischer; Catie Lott; Evan White – California Policy Lab, 2025
The student loan payment pause ended two years ago as of September 2025, but borrowers were given a one-year "on-ramp" to resume payments. In April, the Department of Education announced that collections on student loans would start again. The California Policy Lab's prior work found that a large portion of borrowers were likely to…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Debt (Financial), Loan Repayment, Loan Default
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Meghan E. Carey; Katherine Ardeleanu; Steven C. Marcus; Sha Tao; David Mandell; Andrew J. Epstein; Lindsay L. Shea – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
Medicaid is a major insurer of autistic people. However, during the transition to adulthood, autistic individuals are more likely than people with intellectual disability to lose their Medicaid benefits. Individuals with intellectual disability may have greater success maintaining Medicaid coverage during this time because most states provide…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Clinical Diagnosis, Disability Identification
Donald E. Heller – Institute for College Access & Success, 2024
In December 2023, TICAS published new research on the College Affordability Gap--the gap between students' total cost of attendance and non-loan aid available to them--in California, Michigan, and New York, with a focus on students eligible for Pell Grants. Our new report builds on this research with data from nine additional states (Colorado,…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Access to Education, Federal Aid, Grants
Institute for College Access & Success, 2024
This is the technical documentation for the report, "How the College Cost Reduction Act Could Threaten the Teacher Pipeline." The College Cost Reduction Act would overhaul the Higher Education Act, making changes to student borrowing and repayment, borrower protections, college oversight, postsecondary data, and more. The bill includes a…
Descriptors: Costs, Educational Legislation, Federal Legislation, Paying for College
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Carlas McCauley – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2024
The purpose of this paper is to examine the intersection of social class inequality and education policy through the lens of an analysis of the experiences and effects of state, local, and federal policy meant to engage communities around the use of federal funds to mitigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on students. The author intends to…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Federal Aid, Resource Allocation
Clive Belfield; Thomas Brock; John Fink; Davis Jenkins – Community College Research Center, Teachers College, Columbia University, 2024
The Higher Education Emergency Relief (HEER) Fund had two main purposes: (1) to ensure that colleges could continue to provide education to students in the wake of the pandemic and (2) to provide emergency financial assistance through colleges directly to students. Four years after the onset of the pandemic, this ARCC Network brief uses college…
Descriptors: Emergency Programs, Federal Aid, Grants, Pandemics
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Frank Fernandez; Yuan Chih Fu; Xiaodan Hu; Juan José Moradel Vásquez – Journal of Higher Education, 2024
States have adopted a variety of policies to encourage universities to expand research production, with the hope of supporting economic growth and competitiveness. This paper considers whether a state-level initiative succeeded in influencing university-based research outputs among regional public universities. We test whether the Texas Research…
Descriptors: State Programs, Educational Policy, Research and Development, Public Colleges
James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal, 2024
College accreditation began as a voluntary means to advise American institutions of higher education on "best practices" and signal to prospective students and their parents that the accredited school offered a quality education. This document critiques the current accreditation system in higher education, which has shifted from a…
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Educational Quality, Educational Change, Best Practices
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