Title
The Ambivalence of Access: Tuition-Free Public Policy and College Access for Low-Income Students
Abstract
The higher education access of poor, low-income, and working-class students is a powerful lever in combating poverty, promoting social mobility, and enhancing quality of life across socioeconomic strata. The college access of low-income students has been studied primarily through examinations of support infrastructures and the college-going cultures of socioeconomically disadvantaged communities. Insufficient attention has been paid to the influence of public policies aimed at increasing access and completion, such as tuition-free public policy. This multisite case study of TRIO programs is designed to provide additional insight into the influence of tuition-free public policy on the college access of low-income students.
Description
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. 2020. Major: Educational Policy and Administration. Advisor: Rashne Jehangir . 1 computer file (PDF); 236 pages.
Suggested Citation
Collins, Kelly.
(2020).
The Ambivalence of Access: Tuition-Free Public Policy and College Access for Low-Income Students.
Retrieved from the University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy,
https://hdl.handle.net/11299/224619.