Most Public Universities Pursuing Rich Students at Expense of Poor Ones
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
 - 11/08/17
 
		
        Nearly  two-thirds of selective public institutions are enrolling fewer low-income  students than they did in the late 1990s. At more than half of those  universities (54 percent) the increase in affluent students came at the direct expense  of low-income ones. That's what's revealed in the latest New  America project to  examine student mobility.
The authors  behind "Moving on Up?" found that institutions  reduced their share of students from the bottom 40 percent of income (less than  $37,000 in 2013 dollars) while increasing their share from the top 20 percent  (those with yearly earnings from $110,000 to more than $3 million).
As a blog article by Editor Stephen Burd explained,  the report tapped findings from the Equality  of Opportunity Project,  released in January as part of a study looking at the role colleges play in  helping low-income students gain economic mobility. That project used data from  the U.S. Department of Education as well as anonymized tax returns from the  U.S. Treasury Department, which researchers could link to college attendance  records. Combined, those two sources provided information on family earnings  data for nearly every traditional student (those between 18 and 22 years old)  who attended college between 1999 and 2013.
The newest  report republished a series of blog posts that drilled deeper into the Mobility  Report Card data. Among the findings:
    - When  given the opportunity, low-income students are just as likely to succeed as  their wealthier peers, even at selective colleges.
 
    - Low-income  students tend to do better when they attend more challenge colleges;  undermatching appears to be a much bigger problem than overmatching.
 
    - Low-income  students generally end up going to schools — community colleges, regional state  schools or nonselective or "barely selective" private nonprofit  colleges — with the fewest resources. These are the same schools that generally  have the worst outcomes, giving those students "far less chance of  succeeding than their wealthier counterparts have."
 
Given that  many big-name public flagship and research universities are devoting ever  larger amounts of institutional financial aid dollars to draw wealthy students,  the report stated, "the colleges that offered many low-income students  pathways to success are becoming less accessible over time." The same  trend has surfaced in schools historically known for "lifting low-income  and working-class students" into the middle class.
The report  singled out Stony Brook University as a prime example. Calling the  Long Island institution a "social mobility superstar," the authors  pointed out that it ranked third among thousands of colleges in helping  students "get a leg up." Since the late 1990s, however, the  proportion of Stony Brook students coming from families in the bottom 40  percent has dropped by 8.5 percentage points. Low-income students that made up  a third of the class then now make up just a quarter. During the same period, the  share of students coming from families in the top 20 percent of income has  grown by about seven percentage points to almost 40 percent in the class of  2013. Most of that growth, according to the report, appears to be among  students from families in the top 10 percent of the income scale, a segment  whose share has grown from 16 percent in the class of 2002 to 22 percent in the  class of 2013.
Burd appears  to lay much of the blame for this state of affairs on enrollment managers — the  administrators and college consultants who develop the admissions and financial  aid strategies used in recruiting students. As part of the strategy for  fighting budget cuts and "seeking greater prestige," many of the  selective publics have shifted their attention to wooing "wealthy  out-of-state students and international students," leaving less room for  in-state students with "less privileged backgrounds."
In many  cases universities are spending more than half of their institutional aid  dollars for "non-need-based aid." That's true for the University  of Alabama, the University  of Wyoming and the University  of Arkansas.
The news  wasn't all bad. As Burd wrote, about a fourth of selective public institutions  increased the share of low-income students they serve, while reducing the  proportion of wealthy students. Georgia State University was highlighted for increasing its  share of low-income students to 31 percent and reducing its share of students  from the top 20 percent of families to 26 percent, a drop of 8.5 percentage  points. So were the University of Texas at Austin, which spent just 4 percent of  its $54 million financial aid budget for non-need-based aid; the University  of Nevada, where  12 percent of aid dollars was given to non-needy students; and the University  of Michigan, where  about a third of the aid budget was directed to those students.
The report   called for a better way of measuring a college's commitment to low-income  students by getting more Pell Grant details — not just the percentage of grant  recipients but more information about those who receive the maximum, the  average and the minimum awards.
The  biggest challenge to change, the report concluded, is catching the attention of  those in a position to revise laws and regulations. "We don't pretend we  have all the answers. Plenty of higher education researchers and groups have  offered their own proposals to make college more affordable and accessible for  low-income students. But first federal and state policymakers need to take  notice of the major problems we have highlighted," the authors wrote.  "Are they listening?"
The report  is openly available from New America.