Counseling/Advising

Brief

Helping Low-Income and First-Generation Students Make Good College Choices

April, 2012
Jay Sherwin

Too many low-income, college-ready students are “undermatching” — enrolling in colleges for which they are academically overqualified or not going to college at all. Early results from the College Match Program in three Chicago high schools suggest that it’s possible to help students navigate the complicated college application process and make more informed decisions.

Working Paper
July, 2008
Aletha Huston, Jessica Thornton Walker, Chantelle Dowsett, Amy E. Imes, Angelica Ware

Implemented in 1994, New Hope provided full-time workers with several benefits for three years: an earnings supplement, low-cost health insurance, and subsidized child care. This working paper examines the effects of New Hope on children’s academic achievement and achievement motivation eight years after random assignment.

Report

A Case Study of Peer Leader Programs at Two Achieving the Dream Colleges

February, 2012
Oscar Cerna, Caitlin Platania

Northern Essex Community College and Bunker Hill Community College employed academically successful students to serve as peer leaders to offer additional classroom assistance to fellow students in developmental and introductory college-level courses. The report discusses how the colleges designed and implemented these programs and offers insights into students’ experiences in peer-assisted courses.

Report

How Much Do Achieving the Dream Colleges Spend — and from What Resources — to Become Data-Driven Institutions?

June, 2010
Elizabeth Zachry Rutschow, Erin Coghlan

This report analyzes the experiences of five community colleges that participate in Lumina Foundation’s Achieving the Dream initiative and the investments they made in implementing an institutional improvement process aimed at increasing students’ success. The report examines how, where, and with what resources these colleges supported their reforms, as well as the key activities driving their overall expenditures.

Report

An Impact Evaluation of the Beacon Program at South Texas College

February, 2010
Mary Visher, Kristin F. Butcher, Oscar Cerna

Created as part of the national Achieving the Dream initiative, a “light touch” intervention targeting students enrolled in lower-level math courses increased the number of students using campus tutoring and academic services. While the program has not improved math class pass rates or persistence in college overall, it has had positive effects for part-time and developmental students.

Report

An Implementation and Early Impacts Study of Eight Texas Developmental Summer Bridge Programs

October, 2011
Heather Wathington, Elisabeth A. Barnett, Evan Weissman, Jedediah J. Teres, Joshua Pretlow, Aki Nakanishi

For entering college students with low basic skills, eight intensive summer programs provided accelerated instruction in math, reading, and/or writing; academic support; a “college knowledge” component; and the opportunity to receive a $400 stipend. Early results suggest that participants were more likely to pass entry-level college courses in math and writing.

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