A new grant-funded program envisions colleges putting more skin in the game
Among those who advocate for all students to attend college, one fact is dominant: Students who get a four-year degree are .
And yet as noted by , while a four-year degree frequently leads to upward economic and social mobility, 鈥渢he college payoff only accrues to those who finish a degree, and very few low-income people make it that far.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
海角论坛 scholars who study enrollment management believe a new plan of action is needed to increase accountability for colleges and universities in how they enroll and graduate low-income students.
The case for reform
While 鈥渃ollege for all鈥 has many proponents, experts say that the idea is easily undermined without broader reforms to non-cost barriers that hinder student success, for low-income, Black, Hispanic and Indigenous communities.
Signs indicate the reasons for urgency:
- Only 10 percent of students from the lowest socioeconomic bracket .
- Analysts predict a beginning in 2025, yet the number of low-income high school age students is expected to increase.
- While federal Pell grants once covered nearly 80 percent of the cost of attending a four-year public college, they .
- Fewer than 60 colleges indicate that they are both .
Jerry Lucido, executive director of 海角论坛鈥檚 Center for Enrollment Research, Policy and Practice (CERPP), said that the results of years-long neglect .
鈥淚f we continue to be a social engine that reproduces the current and widening income, education and power gaps in our nation, especially at selective colleges and universities,鈥 Lucido said, 鈥渨e will see further unrest politically, socially and economically.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Even as the Biden administration has , Pell also has limitations, experts say.
鈥淚n retrospect,鈥 said Donald Hossler, a CERPP senior scholar, 鈥減erhaps the biggest mistake made when the Pell Grant was created was that there were no accountability measures built into the law that required institutions enrolling Pell students to make sure they graduated at rates similar to non-Pell students.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Improving beyond Pell
Backed by a grant from the Joyce Foundation, CERPP leaders have designed a block-grant program that would create a new public-private partnership between the federal government and higher education. In 鈥済ood faith and partnership鈥 with this new source of federal support, participating institutions will commit to 鈥渟teady and sustainable progress鈥 in the admission and graduation of low and low-middle income students.
The proposed program incentivizes colleges and universities to prioritize the allocation of their resources toward improving access and graduation rates of low- and low-middle income students, with funds going toward financial aid and student support.
Institutions would match federal allocations with their own funds鈥攚hich would supplement, not supplant, current institutional spending. Accountability metrics are still to be developed, but would be instituted to ensure colleges and universities live up to their promises. CERPP is currently studying what eligibility requirements and funding formula strategies would be most effective.
鈥淲hile our objective is to improve social mobility for these students, it鈥檚 important to note that our economy will depend more and more on an educated workforce,鈥 said Robert Massa, an adjunct associate professor in 海角论坛鈥檚 Enrollment Management and Policy program, and vice president emeritus for enrollment and college relations at Dickinson College. 鈥淚t is a national imperative to increase the numbers of low income students who will continue on to college, graduate and contribute to our economy.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Reform will take a lot of work, Lucido said.
One indication: In October 2020, the American Council on Education commissioned a survey of 246 college and university presidents about attitudes toward college admissions reform. The survey, led by Lucido, Associate Professor Julie Posselt and ACE senior research analyst Maria Claudia Soler, found that only half of the leaders of selective institutions , even as need-based aid is a .
鈥淗igher education can rise to this challenge, but not without financial help or altering the financial model and realities,鈥 Lucido said. 鈥淭here are far too many incentives for institutions to serve money and power鈥攔ankings, tuition-dependence, who pays for research and thereby controls the agendas鈥攃ompared to the relatively few incentives to serve low- and middle-income students.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Additional federal support is especially needed for moderately selective and open admissions institutions to help fund their efforts to increase the success rates of low income and lower-middle class students. These public and private institutions typically have the lowest levels of resources per student enrolled, Hossler said, 鈥測et we hope that they will provide .鈥&苍产蝉辫;