Intensive College Counseling and the Enrollment and Persistence of Low Income Students
Ben Castleman () and
Joshua Goodman ()
Working Paper from Harvard University OpenScholar
Abstract:
Though counseling is one commonly pursued intervention to improve college enrollment and completion for disadvantaged students, there is relatively little causal evidence on its efficacy. We study the impact of intensive college counseling provided to college-seeking, low incomestudents by a Massachusetts program that admits applicants partly on the basis of a minimum GPA requirement. We utilize a regression discontinuity design comparing students just above and below this threshold and find that counseling successfully shifts enrollment toward four-year colleges encouraged by the program, which are largely public and substantially less expensive than alternatives students would otherwise choose. Counseling appears to improve persistencethrough the third year of college, with particularly large impacts on female students and those who speak English at home. The evidence suggests potential for intensive college counseling to improve degree completion rates for disadvantaged students.
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Journal Article: Intensive College Counseling and the Enrollment and Persistence of Low-Income Students (2018) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:qsh:wpaper:175246
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