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How California’s student aid program helps students over their lifetimes (work by Eric Bettinger, Oded Gurantz and colleagues)

June 21, 2016
Inside Higher Education
Stanford GSE associate professor Eric Bettinger, graduate student Oded Gurantz and colleagues publish a working paper on the National Bureau of Economic Research website about the long-term effects of merit aid, using data about California's Cal Grant program.
By 
Ellen Wexler

When a student receives financial aid, the immediate goal is obvious: getting that student enrolled.

But if that aid money comes from the state, the long-term goals typically go beyond enrollment. States want more students to graduate, to earn more money over the course of years -- and, eventually, to stick around, driving the state’s economic growth.

So without studying long-term outcomes, how can we know if financial aid really works?

That’s the argument behind a new working paper (the abstract is available here) from the National Bureau of Economic Research. The researchers studied whether California’s aid program, called Cal Grants, affected enrollment, completion, institution type, earnings and location among students who graduated high school in the late ’90s. They found that Cal Grants actually have very little effect on college attendance -- but they matter for graduation, persistence and future earnings.

Read the entire article on the Inside Higher Education website. To learn more about the research, you can find the abstract and download the full study on the website of Stanford's Center for Education Policy Analysis. More about Eric Bettinger, associate professor of education, is available here. Graduate student Oded Gurantz's bio is posted on the CEPA website.

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