Community colleges are an important part of the higher education
landscape in the United States, but completion rates are extremely low,
especially among low-income students. Much of the existing policy and
research attention to this issue has focused on addressing academic and
financial challenges. However, there is ample reason to think that
non-academic obstacles might be key drivers of dropout rates for
students living with the burden of poverty.
This study examines the
impact of a comprehensive case management intervention that is designed
specifically to help low-income students overcome the multitude of
barriers to college completion. The authors evaluate the impact of this
intervention through a randomized controlled trial evaluation (RCT)
conducted between 2013 and 2016 in Fort Worth, Texas. Eligible students
were randomly assigned to a treatment group that was offered
comprehensive case management, including emergency financial assistance
(EFA), a separate treatment group offered only EFA, or a control group.
Data from school administrative records indicate that the comprehensive
case management program significantly increases persistence and degree
completion, especially for women. Estimates for the full sample are
imprecise, but the estimates for women imply that the case management
intervention tripled associate degree receipt (31 percentage point
increase).
The authors find no difference in outcomes between the EFA-only
treatment arm and the control group.
A back-of-the-envelope calculation
using average earnings gains associated with community college
completion implies that program benefits exceed program costs ($5,640
per student for three year program) after only 4.25 years in the
workforce post schooling.
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