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Oct. 30, 2002
Contact:
Beth Flannigan
(404) 651-3574
bflannigan@gsu.edu
ATLANTA - HOPE Scholarship recipients take more courses, make better
grades, and are more likely to graduate college in four years than their
peers - whether or not they keep the scholarship, according to a new
study by Georgia State University researchers. The study examined
borderline HOPE recipients to see whether they performed better than their
peers who didn't receive the scholarship, and to find out what happened
when students lost the award. Borderline HOPE scholars, researchers discovered,
earn about 14 more credit hours over four years, have a grade-point average
about .17 points higher, and have a 72 percent higher chance of graduating
a four-year institution after four years than are students who were similarly
prepared for college, but didn't meet the HOPE requirements.
"We already knew that the vast majority of HOPE recipients lose
their scholarships after completing 30 credit hours of college work,"
said Gary Henry, professor of public
administration and urban studies, political science, and educational policy
studies. "Our study found that these students still tend to have
a better grade-point average and take more credit hours than do students
who never received HOPE. Loss of the scholarship reduces, but does not
eliminate, the initial benefits of receiving the scholarship on credit
hours and grade-point average."
In their study, "Is HOPE Enough?" Henry and Ross
Rubenstein, assistant professor of public administration and educational
policy studies, compared a group of borderline HOPE recipients with another
group that had similar grades for high-school core courses, but fell just
below the threshold of eligibility for the award because of their grades
in non-core courses. The study was prompted in part by concerns that students
were initially taking fewer credit hours at a time in order to remain
eligible for the scholarship longer. In fact, Henry and Rubenstein found
that HOPE recipients earn an average of almost 14 credit hours more over
four years than do borderline non-recipients. This difference is equivalent
to just over one course per year.
"It's a relatively small difference, but statistically significant,"
said Rubenstein. "Perhaps it's because having the financial aid allows
students to attend school for more hours in the day, rather than working.
We don't know that, but we do know that our results don't support the
assertion that HOPE students take fewer courses than non-HOPE students
to retain eligibility."
Full study: Is HOPE Enough?
Impacts of Receiving and Losing Merit-based Financial Aid (pdf). For
further information, contact Gary Henry at 404-651-2343. Audio clips online
at GSU's Radioline.
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