Spending More or Spending Less? Institutional Expenditures and Staffing in the Free-College Era

While research has documented outcomes for students served by promise programs, few studies have considered the behavior of institutions themselves in the promise era. A new source of revenue combined with larger and more diverse cohorts is likely to motivate changes in spending and staffing—decisio...

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Main Authors: Taylor K. Odle, Alex B. Monday
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-07-01
Series:AERA Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584211034491
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spelling doaj-5df44e9829884093994642525ef755102021-07-28T21:34:20ZengSAGE PublishingAERA Open2332-85842021-07-01710.1177/23328584211034491Spending More or Spending Less? Institutional Expenditures and Staffing in the Free-College EraTaylor K. OdleAlex B. MondayWhile research has documented outcomes for students served by promise programs, few studies have considered the behavior of institutions themselves in the promise era. A new source of revenue combined with larger and more diverse cohorts is likely to motivate changes in spending and staffing—decisions instrumental to student access and success. We employ complementary difference-in-differences and synthetic control strategies to estimate impacts of the first statewide promise program on these two outcomes. Findings suggest institutions diverted expenditures away from instruction, academic support, and institutional support toward greater institutional grant awards. We find no meaningful impact on staffing levels. While some institutional actions may further support the access and success goals of promise programs, the diversity of programs across the nation suggests not all may follow suit. This study should inform policy makers considering the full extent of outcomes of free-college programs and invigorate further research on institutional responses.https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584211034491
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Taylor K. Odle
Alex B. Monday
spellingShingle Taylor K. Odle
Alex B. Monday
Spending More or Spending Less? Institutional Expenditures and Staffing in the Free-College Era
AERA Open
author_facet Taylor K. Odle
Alex B. Monday
author_sort Taylor K. Odle
title Spending More or Spending Less? Institutional Expenditures and Staffing in the Free-College Era
title_short Spending More or Spending Less? Institutional Expenditures and Staffing in the Free-College Era
title_full Spending More or Spending Less? Institutional Expenditures and Staffing in the Free-College Era
title_fullStr Spending More or Spending Less? Institutional Expenditures and Staffing in the Free-College Era
title_full_unstemmed Spending More or Spending Less? Institutional Expenditures and Staffing in the Free-College Era
title_sort spending more or spending less? institutional expenditures and staffing in the free-college era
publisher SAGE Publishing
series AERA Open
issn 2332-8584
publishDate 2021-07-01
description While research has documented outcomes for students served by promise programs, few studies have considered the behavior of institutions themselves in the promise era. A new source of revenue combined with larger and more diverse cohorts is likely to motivate changes in spending and staffing—decisions instrumental to student access and success. We employ complementary difference-in-differences and synthetic control strategies to estimate impacts of the first statewide promise program on these two outcomes. Findings suggest institutions diverted expenditures away from instruction, academic support, and institutional support toward greater institutional grant awards. We find no meaningful impact on staffing levels. While some institutional actions may further support the access and success goals of promise programs, the diversity of programs across the nation suggests not all may follow suit. This study should inform policy makers considering the full extent of outcomes of free-college programs and invigorate further research on institutional responses.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584211034491
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