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An Assessment of “HOPE-Style” Merit Scholarships Christopher M. Cornwell David B. Mustard University of Georgia Institute of Higher Education September 2012
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Basic Economics Start with the standard model People try to do the best they can given the circumstances People respond to incentives Applied to higher ed What is the typical student’s objective? What is the state’s or institution’s objective?
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Estimating Policy Effects Structural vs reduced-form approaches Problem of identification – what is the relevant counterfactual? Estimating causal effects Instrumental variables Difference-in-differences Regression discontinuity designs Matching
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Understanding Diff-in-Diff Suppose after HOPE is implemented, the enrollment rate in Georgia increases. Can we say that HOPE increased the enrollment rate? Suppose enrollment rates in Georgia are higher than in other neighboring states in the period after HOPE. Can we say that HOPE increased the enrollment rate?
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Identification with DD
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Example
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Our Work on Merit Aid Background Findings Financing Merit Aid Enrollments Stratification Academic Achievement
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Background Growth of large-scale, state merit aid Georgia’s HOPE Scholarship as the model Common features Entitlement – based on high-school GPA (and sometimes test scores) No limit on # of award winners Scholars are eligible for multiple years Common justifications Increase enrollments in state universities Keep the best and brightest in state Promote academic achievement
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Large-scale State Merit Programs Arkansas Academic Challenge (1991) Georgia’s HOPE (1993) Florida Bright Futures (1997) New Mexico Success (1997) Louisiana Tops (1998) South Carolina Life (1998) Kentucky Ed. Excellence Sch. (1999) U. of Alaska Scholars Program (1999) Washington Promise (1999) Maryland HOPE (2000) Nevada Millennium (2000) West Virginia Promise (2002) Tennessee HOPE (2004) Massachusetts Adams Scholarship (2005) Wyoming Hathaway (2006)
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Georgia’s HOPE Program HOPE – Helping Outstanding Pupils Educationally Introduced in 1993 and funded by a state lottery Almost $3.6 billion disbursed to over 900,000 students Two types of aid: Scholarship – merit-based; for degree-seeking students Grant – not based on merit; for certificate and diploma seekers
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Georgia’s HOPE Program Scholarship awards Public schools – full tuition and fees + $300 book allowance Private schools – $3,000 voucher Eligibility and retention ‘B’ average in HS core courses 3.0 in college, checked at systematic intervals
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Georgia’s HOPE Program
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Significant program changes Income cap relaxed in 1994 and eliminated in 1995 Expanded to include non-traditional students (1996), home-schoolers (1998) “Add-on” scholarships (late 1990s) Removal of Pell offset (2001) Growing concern that expenditures will outstrip lottery revenue
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Georgia’s HOPE Program
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Assessing HOPE 1.Financing Merit Aid 2.Enrollments a.Effect on Georgia institutions b.Effect on “brain drain” 3.College stratification 4.Academic achievement a.College GPA b.Course loads c.Course and major selection 5.But do they stay?
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1. Financing Merit Aid Methods of financing Lottery (Georgia, Florida, Kentucky, New Mexico, South Carolina, Tennessee) General revenue (Arkansas, Louisiana, Washington) Tobacco settlement (Michigan) Video gambling (West Virginia) Interest on land leases and sales (Alaska)
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1. Financing Merit Aid What is the annual per capita spending of adults on the Georgia lottery? What is the annual per capita spending of people at this meeting? 73.6% of Georgia population is > 18 1/3 of adults do not play lottery
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1. Financing Merit Aid Sales per capita = $371.39 Sales per > 18 = $503.92 1/3 of adults don’t play, so … Sales per > 18 who play = $752.13
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1. Financing Merit Aid
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2. Enrollments GroupOverall 4-Year Publics 4-Year Privates 2-Year Publics 2-Year Publics + Techs All5.99.013.0ns Whites3.64.49.2ns Blacks15.826.016.8ns11.6 Percentage Increases in Freshmen Enrollments Attributable to HOPE By Institution Type and Race, 1988-97
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2. Enrollments Students in State Residents in CollegeStayers Out-of- StatersLeavers Number1216280840376-560 t-ratio1.440.411.391.283.09 Out-of-State effect = Students in State – Stayers Leavers effect = Residents in College – Stayers HOPE Effects on Student Migration Numbers of Recent Freshmen in 4-Year Schools By Residency and Destination, 1988, 92, 94, 96
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3. College Stratification
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Quality MeasureAllUniversityComprehensive4-Year Mean SATM6.29.4ns Mean SATV4.914.36.9ns SATM sdns-2.2ns SATV sdns-3.5ns1.8 Top 10%ns7.61.7ns Effects of HOPE on SAT Scores and Class Rank By Institution Type, 1989-2001
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3. College Stratification Quality MeasureAllUniversityComprehensive4-Year Acceptance Rate-7.5-8.4-3.6-9.9 Yield Ratens4.1ns3.5 Effects of HOPE on Acceptance and Yield Rates By Institution Type, 1989-2001
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4. Academic Achievement Cumulative UGA Freshmen GPA Distributions Residents vs Non-Residents
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4. Academic Achievement UGA Freshmen, by Residency and HOPE Status
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4. Academic Achievement Percentage of Freshmen Completing a Full Load Resident vs Non-Residents
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4. Academic Achievement Course-Load Effects at UGA 5.1% drop in full-load enrollment rate 16.1% rise in withdrawal rate 9.3% drop in full-load completion rate 3100 fewer courses taken Effects concentrated among students predicted to be on or below the retention margin 63% increase in summer-school course- taking in 1 st summer; 44% in 2 nd
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4. Academic Achievement Core-Course Selection at UGA.63 credit (6%) drop in Math and Science credits in 1 st year 1.2 credit drop over first two years Consistent with substitution away from courses that have low expected GPAs Major Selection at UGA 1.2 pct point increase in probability of declaring an Education major (~ 50 students) Effect stronger among women 1.7 pct point decrease in probability of declaring a Business major
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5. But do they stay?
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More on HOPE http://www.terry.uga.edu/hope/
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