Healthy, Housed, and Well-Fed: Exploring Basic Needs Support Programming in the Context of University Student Success

Meeting college students’ basic needs is the goal of a new set of student success initiatives that address students’ urgent food, housing, or financial hardships in an effort to help them remain and succeed in college. Focusing on one California public university, we describe one such basic needs pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brandon Balzer Carr, Rebecca A. London
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-11-01
Series:AERA Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858420972619
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spelling doaj-8dfadd2bbdfa4296a3f38730195e8b242020-11-25T04:00:25ZengSAGE PublishingAERA Open2332-85842020-11-01610.1177/2332858420972619Healthy, Housed, and Well-Fed: Exploring Basic Needs Support Programming in the Context of University Student SuccessBrandon Balzer CarrRebecca A. LondonMeeting college students’ basic needs is the goal of a new set of student success initiatives that address students’ urgent food, housing, or financial hardships in an effort to help them remain and succeed in college. Focusing on one California public university, we describe one such basic needs program, identifying the students who participate, their hardships and services received, and their retention over time. Students presented with issues in four main areas: food insecurity, mental health, multiple severe hardships, and need for one-time supports. In general, participants were retained at lower rates than the campus average, which is to be expected given their severe hardships. However, those who enrolled in the Supplementation Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) were retained at higher rates, on par with or higher than university-wide retention. California has amended SNAP regulations to waive work requirements for low-income students, making it easier for college students to qualify.https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858420972619
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brandon Balzer Carr
Rebecca A. London
spellingShingle Brandon Balzer Carr
Rebecca A. London
Healthy, Housed, and Well-Fed: Exploring Basic Needs Support Programming in the Context of University Student Success
AERA Open
author_facet Brandon Balzer Carr
Rebecca A. London
author_sort Brandon Balzer Carr
title Healthy, Housed, and Well-Fed: Exploring Basic Needs Support Programming in the Context of University Student Success
title_short Healthy, Housed, and Well-Fed: Exploring Basic Needs Support Programming in the Context of University Student Success
title_full Healthy, Housed, and Well-Fed: Exploring Basic Needs Support Programming in the Context of University Student Success
title_fullStr Healthy, Housed, and Well-Fed: Exploring Basic Needs Support Programming in the Context of University Student Success
title_full_unstemmed Healthy, Housed, and Well-Fed: Exploring Basic Needs Support Programming in the Context of University Student Success
title_sort healthy, housed, and well-fed: exploring basic needs support programming in the context of university student success
publisher SAGE Publishing
series AERA Open
issn 2332-8584
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Meeting college students’ basic needs is the goal of a new set of student success initiatives that address students’ urgent food, housing, or financial hardships in an effort to help them remain and succeed in college. Focusing on one California public university, we describe one such basic needs program, identifying the students who participate, their hardships and services received, and their retention over time. Students presented with issues in four main areas: food insecurity, mental health, multiple severe hardships, and need for one-time supports. In general, participants were retained at lower rates than the campus average, which is to be expected given their severe hardships. However, those who enrolled in the Supplementation Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) were retained at higher rates, on par with or higher than university-wide retention. California has amended SNAP regulations to waive work requirements for low-income students, making it easier for college students to qualify.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858420972619
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