This article compares efforts by three highly selective colleges, Harvard, Wellesley, and MIT, to support low-income students. The article is based on interviews with administrators and an analysis of secondary sources, program documents, and journalistic accounts. Differences in college cultures contribute to the development of different approaches, with Harvard providing supplemental financial resources and advising while Wellesley and MIT offer programs to help new students adjust academically and socially. However, common lessons can be identified across these varied approaches: these include the importance of developing supplementary rather than remedial academic programs, initiating conversations about class as well as race, enlis...
Socioeconomic diversity in tertiary education has come under heightened scrutiny in the past few yea...
Beginning in 1998, selective colleges began adopting no-loan admissions policies to increase socioec...
This study examines peer social networks among low-income students at an elite college. A qualitativ...
One of the main issues at the forefront of higher education policy discussions in the last decade co...
Low-income students continue to struggle with the rising costs of higher education. Four-year colleg...
The concept of academic mismatch and how and why a student chooses a particular college is a phenome...
The primary aim of this research project is to better understand the commitment of mid-market privat...
Only a minority of high-achieving, low-income students apply to colleges in the same way that other ...
Low-income students have historically struggled in applying to colleges, especially liberal arts col...
One of the main issues at the forefront of higher education policy discussions in the last decade co...
A number of national studies point to a trend in which highly selective and elite private and public...
Most low-income, high-achieving students in the United States neither attend nor apply to selective ...
Highly selective universities have long played a role as one of the gatekeepers to privileged positi...
This dissertation consists of two chapters studying the importance of household income for shaping s...
Low-income students do not have the same access to higher education as their wealthy counterparts. S...
Socioeconomic diversity in tertiary education has come under heightened scrutiny in the past few yea...
Beginning in 1998, selective colleges began adopting no-loan admissions policies to increase socioec...
This study examines peer social networks among low-income students at an elite college. A qualitativ...
One of the main issues at the forefront of higher education policy discussions in the last decade co...
Low-income students continue to struggle with the rising costs of higher education. Four-year colleg...
The concept of academic mismatch and how and why a student chooses a particular college is a phenome...
The primary aim of this research project is to better understand the commitment of mid-market privat...
Only a minority of high-achieving, low-income students apply to colleges in the same way that other ...
Low-income students have historically struggled in applying to colleges, especially liberal arts col...
One of the main issues at the forefront of higher education policy discussions in the last decade co...
A number of national studies point to a trend in which highly selective and elite private and public...
Most low-income, high-achieving students in the United States neither attend nor apply to selective ...
Highly selective universities have long played a role as one of the gatekeepers to privileged positi...
This dissertation consists of two chapters studying the importance of household income for shaping s...
Low-income students do not have the same access to higher education as their wealthy counterparts. S...
Socioeconomic diversity in tertiary education has come under heightened scrutiny in the past few yea...
Beginning in 1998, selective colleges began adopting no-loan admissions policies to increase socioec...
This study examines peer social networks among low-income students at an elite college. A qualitativ...