Conditional pell dollars miss students who need them most.
Goldrick-RAB, Sara
Education reform is a well-intentioned effort to improve outcomes
for all students that is undercut by a misguided focus on achieving
those goals on the cheap. The proposal I've been asked to discuss,
which would condition Pell Grants on "college readiness," is
just the latest example. This idea is redundant and expensive, and will
decrease the Pell's cost-effectiveness by exacerbating an existing
trend toward retargeting aid to students who are less affected by it.
Let's start with the facts. As it stands today, the federal
Pell Grant program requires students to complete secondary school; no
student can receive the Pell unless she has a high school diploma. Until
July 2012 there was an alternative way to obtain the Pell via a
standardized "ability to benefit" test. That no longer exists.
In this sense, the college-readiness standards for Pell are stronger
than ever and will be even stronger if the Common Core State Standards
initiative has its way with the high school diploma. Moreover, the Pell
Grant also includes a satisfactory academic progress standard that
ensures that students who are failing to make decent grades in college
do not keep the award. Typically set at a C average (2.0), close to the
mean grade-point average (GPA) of Pell recipients, that standard revokes
funding from tens of thousands of students every year.
Whether or not increasing standards is a positive step in the right
direction depends on one's perspective. If you are concerned about
the American dream, aiming to ensure that hard work and talent, rather
than family background, determine children's opportunities, this is
a move in the wrong direction. The chances of obtaining a high school
degree (and thus being eligible for the Pell Grant) remain highly
unequal based on family income and wealth, and ending any second-chance
alternative pathways to federal financial aid reinforces that
stratification. But it's already been done.
In today's world, we must be concerned with what we get for
our money, and Pell dollars are no exception. For this reason, it is
instructive to return to the creation of the Pell Grant and its explicit
purpose: "the right of every youngster, regardless of his
family's financial circumstances, to obtain a postsecondary
education." Note the focus on "obtaining" the education,
not merely "accessing" it. In this critical sense, the Pell
Grant is meant to support students as they move from college entry to
college completion, and yet for the last 30 years, that purpose has been
all but forgotten.
Moving students from low-income families from initial college entry
to the completion of degrees requires that Pell Grants effectively
reduce the costs of attendance so that students are able to work less
and study more, and can overcome financial obstacles in their way. Its
purchasing power has declined to the point that it does not do this.
Moreover, research indicates that low-income students who obtain a high
school diploma but are not in the top echelons of their school are the
most likely to need and benefit from financial assistance: they require
extra time to devote to schoolwork and yet are more likely to have unmet
financial need, since so-called "merit" aid rarely flows to
them.
When need-based financial aid programs like the Pell Grant are
evaluated, researchers tend to find that students reformers might not
deem "college ready" obtain the greatest returns from the
effort. For example, Mark Schneider of the American Enterprise Institute
found that in both Texas and Louisiana aid worked best for the students
who faced a lot of unmet need partly because they did not qualify for
aid based on their academic profiles. These students, however, are not
the focus of programs in their states. Similarly, economists Bridget
Long and Ben Castleman found that Florida's Student Access Grant
boosted college attainment the most for students who graduated in the
top 25 percent of their high school graduating class but did not qualify
for Florida's Bright Futures merit aid program. Raising the bar on
academic requirements for the Pell Grant would thus seem to reduce
program effectiveness, not increase it.
One of the greatest challenges facing our nation is the increasing
stronghold that family income has in determining college attainment.
University of Michigan scholars Martha Bailey and Susan Dynarski found
that among people born in the early 1960s, there was a
31-percentage-point income gap in the chances of bachelor's degree
attainment, with just 5 percent of those from poor families completing
college compared to 36 percent of wealthy students. Over the next 20
years, the gap grew to 45 percentage points primarily because the
attainment of the wealthiest Americans raced ahead (up to 54 percent
completing college), while Americans from more modest means made far
smaller gains (increasing their chances to just 9 percent). The
consequences are a reduction in America's labor force productivity,
future increases in spending on the social safety net, and a loss of tax
revenue. this bad situation worse. The K-12 system remains
overwhelmingly unequal, and chaining Pell eligibility to it even further
ensures that both ends of the educational process remain unequally
distributed. It transforms the Pell Grant from a policy aimed at
transforming lives to one that simply rewards students lucky enough to
be born into situations where their families are able to seize good
high-school educations for them.
Let's be honest: adding such merit criteria to Pell Grants
will merely make the program cheaper. We can look to history to tell us
this. Consider the last merit-based Pell Grant, the Academic
Competitiveness Grant (ACG). When implemented in 2006, the ACG
restricted the provision of this supplemental Pell Grant to students who
took rigorous high-school coursework, as assessed by a rubric that had
to be manually verified and followed by financial aid officers. The
lessons from the ACG are instructive: it served far fewer students than
expected, added substantially to administrative costs, and was widely
viewed as a failure. The program was ended in 2011 during a period of
budget cuts.
Clearly, if the ACG criteria were imported into the main Pell Grant
program, far fewer students would be served, and costs would fall. But
so would its cost-effectiveness. In fact, improving the Pell's
cost-effectiveness requires actions in exactly the opposite direction.
America needs more of its low-income families to send their children on
for post-secondary education so that they can join our workforce, pay
taxes, and build healthy families for future children. Focusing only on
the "talented tenth" of Pell recipients will be a disaster,
leaving millions of other students behind. That is a financial risk we
cannot afford to take.
The data suggest that removing the Pell Grant from less-prepared
students will not compel many of them to forgo college. Instead, they
will enroll, and without grant aid, they will take on debt, even more
than they already do. Their debt will become our debt, as they fail to
repay, go into default, and become part of underground economies that do
not pay taxes and exact substantial strain on our neighborhoods and
communities. There is no escaping the cost of educating these students
at the postsecondary level in today's economy; there is merely the
question of whether to pay now, or pay later.
If the goal is to increase the cost-effectiveness of the Pell Grant
program rather than simply cheapening it, policymakers should refocus
their sights on the real problem: we spend a lot on financial aid but
spending alone is insufficient to make college truly affordable. The
purchasing power of the Pell Grant has been devastated. When created,
the Pell Grant covered nearly 90 percent of the costs of attending a
public college or university, but today it covers barely 30 percent.
Students from working poor families, earning an average of $16,000 a
year, are asked to fork over as much as $12,000 a year--after taking
grant aid into account--in order to finance attendance at a public
bachelor's degree-granting institution. Is it any wonder that some
drop out? The real culprit is not a lack of academic preparation, but
instead the actions of state legislatures, colleges, and universities
that hike up the costs of attendance, underinvest in need-based
financial grant aid, and spend the least on support services at the
schools where students possess the greatest economic and academic needs.
Creating a cost-effective Pell Grant that promotes both access and
completion requires adding state and institutional accountability and
increasing spending on the Pell and the federal work-study program. In
sharp contrast to K-12 education, where the federal government
contributes at most 10 percent of revenue yet has strong accountability
demands, in the postsecondary arena colleges and universities receive up
to 90 percent of their support from student financial aid and yet are
asked to do very little in return. We need to restore the purchasing
power of the Pell Grant by bringing states and institutions to the table
and driving down college costs. Financial aid will never keep pace with
uncontrolled costs of attendance, and it should not have to. We must
provide incentives for states to move toward providing two years of
community or technical college at no cost to families. The federal
government should match these commitments by expanding the federal
work-study program, especially at community colleges. Raise the bar by
ensuring that every Pell Grant recipient has access to a minimum of 20
hours per week of on-campus employment: they will gladly work to earn
the support, and increased college contact has positive benefits for
their academic progress as well. Require schools to provide all students
with supportive staff to help them construct realistic schedules and
financial plans, and ensure that they are screened for eligibility for
all forms of financial aid and public benefits each year to support
their college attendance. Finally, adjust the calculation of need so
that it is possible for the expected family contribution to drop below
$0 for the most severely poor students; this will allow them to accept
as much financial aid (and subsidized loans) as they need to ensure
their college costs are covered. Only then can we expect students to
really focus, work hard, and finish their degrees. Certainly, these
kinds of changes are much more difficult than simply cutting students
out of the program, and they will take more time to achieve, but they
will also lead to the creation of the cost-effective Pell Grant program
that the nation deserves.
Low-income students who obtain a high school diploma, but are not
in the top echelons of their school, are the most likely to need and
benefit from financial assistance. So-called "merit" aid
rarely flows to them.
When created, the Pell Grant covered nearly 90 percent of the costs
of attending a public college or university, but today it covers barely
30 percent.