Is a College Promise Program an Effective Use of Resources? Understanding the Implications of Program Design and Resource Investments for Equity and Efficiency

Also known as “free tuition,” college promise programs are emerging across the United States as a potential mechanism for improving college access and affordability, Whether these initiatives are an effective use of resources depends on whether programs advance societal goals for equity and efficien...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Laura W. Perna, Jeremy Wright-Kim, Elaine W. Leigh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-10-01
Series:AERA Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858420967633
id doaj-31435ebe1e62430091f12d6aefe07256
record_format Article
spelling doaj-31435ebe1e62430091f12d6aefe072562020-11-25T03:36:56ZengSAGE PublishingAERA Open2332-85842020-10-01610.1177/2332858420967633Is a College Promise Program an Effective Use of Resources? Understanding the Implications of Program Design and Resource Investments for Equity and EfficiencyLaura W. PernaJeremy Wright-KimElaine W. LeighAlso known as “free tuition,” college promise programs are emerging across the United States as a potential mechanism for improving college access and affordability, Whether these initiatives are an effective use of resources depends on whether programs advance societal goals for equity and efficiency. Although some emerging research explores the role of program design, few studies have probed how program design and resource investments influence program outcomes, efficiency, and equity. To address this knowledge gap, this study draws on case studies of programs that offer free tuition to attend four community colleges. Findings illustrate how program outcomes, efficiency, and equity may be influenced by the criteria used to determine program eligibility and the resources invested in the financial award and other program components. We hope the findings are useful to policymakers and institutional leaders, as they strive to allocate resources to advance both efficiency and equity.https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858420967633
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura W. Perna
Jeremy Wright-Kim
Elaine W. Leigh
spellingShingle Laura W. Perna
Jeremy Wright-Kim
Elaine W. Leigh
Is a College Promise Program an Effective Use of Resources? Understanding the Implications of Program Design and Resource Investments for Equity and Efficiency
AERA Open
author_facet Laura W. Perna
Jeremy Wright-Kim
Elaine W. Leigh
author_sort Laura W. Perna
title Is a College Promise Program an Effective Use of Resources? Understanding the Implications of Program Design and Resource Investments for Equity and Efficiency
title_short Is a College Promise Program an Effective Use of Resources? Understanding the Implications of Program Design and Resource Investments for Equity and Efficiency
title_full Is a College Promise Program an Effective Use of Resources? Understanding the Implications of Program Design and Resource Investments for Equity and Efficiency
title_fullStr Is a College Promise Program an Effective Use of Resources? Understanding the Implications of Program Design and Resource Investments for Equity and Efficiency
title_full_unstemmed Is a College Promise Program an Effective Use of Resources? Understanding the Implications of Program Design and Resource Investments for Equity and Efficiency
title_sort is a college promise program an effective use of resources? understanding the implications of program design and resource investments for equity and efficiency
publisher SAGE Publishing
series AERA Open
issn 2332-8584
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Also known as “free tuition,” college promise programs are emerging across the United States as a potential mechanism for improving college access and affordability, Whether these initiatives are an effective use of resources depends on whether programs advance societal goals for equity and efficiency. Although some emerging research explores the role of program design, few studies have probed how program design and resource investments influence program outcomes, efficiency, and equity. To address this knowledge gap, this study draws on case studies of programs that offer free tuition to attend four community colleges. Findings illustrate how program outcomes, efficiency, and equity may be influenced by the criteria used to determine program eligibility and the resources invested in the financial award and other program components. We hope the findings are useful to policymakers and institutional leaders, as they strive to allocate resources to advance both efficiency and equity.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858420967633
work_keys_str_mv AT laurawperna isacollegepromiseprogramaneffectiveuseofresourcesunderstandingtheimplicationsofprogramdesignandresourceinvestmentsforequityandefficiency
AT jeremywrightkim isacollegepromiseprogramaneffectiveuseofresourcesunderstandingtheimplicationsofprogramdesignandresourceinvestmentsforequityandefficiency
AT elainewleigh isacollegepromiseprogramaneffectiveuseofresourcesunderstandingtheimplicationsofprogramdesignandresourceinvestmentsforequityandefficiency
_version_ 1724548117505769472