Financial Aid Helps High Risk College Students

    Results from an ongoing random assignment study of a private grant program in Wisconsin indicate that low-income students who receive Pell Grants and are unlikely to finish college get a sizeable boost in college persistence from additional financial aid. The findings suggest that directing aid to serve the neediest students may be the most equitable and cost-effective approach.

Researchers with the Wisconsin Scholars Longitudinal Study (WSLS) at the University of Wisconsin–Madison have been examining the impact of the Fund for Wisconsin Scholars (FFWS) need-based grant program on the educational attainment of its recipients since 2008. FFWS provides $3,500 per year to full-time, federal Pell Grant recipients enrolled at University of Wisconsin System institutions. WSLS researchers have collected survey and interview data on 1,500 students, including 600 grant recipients and a random sample of 900 eligible non-recipients who serve as a control group.

“Our findings suggest that making college more affordable for students who were initially unlikely to succeed in college increased their college persistence rates over the first three years of college by about 17 percentage points,” says Sara Goldrick-Rab, WSLS co-director and associate professor of educational policy studies and sociology.  

However, since financial aid programs usually do not explicitly target this particular group of students, prior research has found that the average effects of need-based grants are often modest. “It’s common to focus only on the average effects of financial aid programs, but it’s clear that often policies work better for some people than others,” says Goldrick-Rab.  “In this case, the Wisconsin grant really helped some students, didn’t help others, and may even have had adverse consequences for another group.”

While policy discussions about targeting financial aid often focus on financial need, the WSLS researchers also considered challenges faced by first-generation students and those with inadequate academic preparation. According to the study, students without college-educated parents and those with lower test scores were initially much less likely to persist in college, while students with high test scores and whose parents held bachelor’s degrees began with a high probability of finishing. The effects of the additional financial aid provided by the Wisconsin grant were very different for those two groups.

Initial findings indicate the program has a moderate positive impact, on average, on the educational attainment of grant recipients.  “Enrollment rates didn’t improve much over three years.  But the good news is that some students who were awarded the grant were 28 percent more likely to finish 60 credits over two years, increasing the chances that they will earn a bachelor’s degree on time,” says Doug Harris, WSLS co-director and associate professor of educational policy studies and public affairs.  

Given the WSLS is the first random assignment study of a program with a similar structure to the federal Pell Grant, it may have important implications for that program, one of the nation’s largest in the education sector. According to Michael McPherson, President of the Spencer Foundation and noted scholar of higher education policy, “This study is the result of an extraordinary opportunity to bring high-quality experimental research to a vitally important question: the effect of changes in need-based grant aid on outcomes for students already enrolled in college.”

Goldrick-Rab, Harris, and co-authors James Benson and Robert Kelchen present and discuss additional findings in a working paper issued by the Institute for Research on Poverty entitled “Conditional Cash Transfers and College Persistence: Evidence from a Randomized Need-Based Grant Program.” It can be downloaded, along with an executive summary, at: http://www.finaidstudy.org

More information is available at: http://www.finaidstudy.org/conference.html

3 comments on “Financial Aid Helps High Risk College Students”

  1. I wish there was more aid available to students. We live in California and my son didn’t get any aid last year and he is not going to get anything this year either. We don’t qualify because we make more money than the guideline allows, however in California the living expenses are very high too. Now with the recession go on, our business slowed down a lot. We have to take out a loan for him to keep going. I wish there was more aid available to students.

  2. I agree that I hope the aid would duplicate however I know it could not assist every single student who wants to go to college because the numbers are really countless. I’ve just watched the news a while ago and there was news regarding the US allowed a company to loan much money. There are more programs or things that needs the money, which is more important. Sometimes the administrations are really making big wrong decisions, I hope I am wrong but the people needs jobs and to get jobs they need to have an education, to get education they need money. Life just goes on in circles.

    kymillia
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  3. Thanks for the great info about Pell Grants & financial aid for prospective college students, like my son. All the information we can get on this subject will be much appreciated. Please also write about how to get scholarships. I will search this site for some information on scholarships after this comment. Keep up the great work! Randy from http://www.310antiques.com/fine-watches


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