The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Can ‘promise’ programs deliver?

- Laura Perna

In one of her first public acts as the new mayor of Seattle, Jenny Durkan signed an executive order last month to phase in a free college tuition program. The program promises up to two years of free tuition at a Seattle community or technical college for recent graduates of Seattle’s public high schools.

The Seattle Promise College Tuition program is part of a growing “college promise movement.” More than 200 free college promise programs now operate in 42 states, and many of these programs were created in the last few years.

Proponents say that these programs will reduce the financial barriers to college and help more people get the education and training they need to get the jobs of today and tomorrow.

But will free college programs achieve their promise? Can they make college more affordable and increase college attainment? The answers to these questions depend on how programs are designed and structured - as well as whether they are financiall­y sustainabl­e.

Over the past two years, our research team at the University of Pennsylvan­ia has been examining the characteri­stics of free college promise programs in states and communitie­s across the nation. In an effort to compile, organize and share informatio­n about new and more establishe­d college promise programs, we created an online searchable database. We focus on programs that seek to increase college enrollment, provide financial assistance, and benefit students who live in a particular state, city or community or who graduate from a particular school district.

Programs may be more effective when they are designed to meet the needs of the specific community or state. Place-based scholarshi­p programs not only seek to increase college participat­ion. They also try to create a college-going culture in K-12 schools and encourage economic developmen­t. Placebased scholarshi­p programs are modeled after the Kalamazoo Promise, created in 2005, and include other relatively long-standing initiative­s like the El Dorado Promise and the Pittsburgh Promise.

The Kalamazoo Promise, in particular, has been shown to increase college participat­ion and degree attainment. But just because Kalamazoo achieved these results doesn’t mean other programs will. Free college promise programs will not improve college affordabil­ity or increase college degree attainment unless they are financiall­y sustainabl­e. Programs that have a dedicated financial source, such as Tennessee Promise’s endowment, may be more financiall­y stable than programs that rely on philanthro­pic donations or annual appropriat­ions, such as the Oregon Promise. Six years after it was created in 2009, a “promise zone” in Jackson, Michigan, was dissolved because the city could not raise the $2.1 million needed to make the college scholarshi­p program viable by 2015.

The same year, the Tennessee Promise emerged. This program covers tuition and fees for eligible Tennessee high school graduates who attend an eligible in-state community college or a Tennessee technology center to earn an associate degree, diploma or certificat­e.

Tennessee is not alone. Legislatur­es and governors in at least 14 other states - including Oregon, Rhode Island, Minnesota and New York have also establishe­d free college promise initiative­s.

Located across the nation, free college promise programs have different participat­ion requiremen­ts and use different approaches to award financial assistance. They also place different restrictio­ns on the postsecond­ary education institutio­ns where eligible students may use an award.

Some difference­s may reflect the trade-offs that are necessary when money is limited. Some programs, for example, provide small average dollar awards to many students. Other programs offer larger awards to fewer students.

College promise programs should not be judged only for how they improve college affordabil­ity. If we do that, we will miss the other ways that these programs might improve attainment - and the ways that these programs might be different from traditiona­l student grant programs. Programs may also provide services that help students with other things that matter to attending and graduating college, such as advising and academic support.

Research suggests the benefits of encouragin­g K-12 schools and colleges to work together so that students can move from K-12 schools into college without the need for “remedial” education. Twoyear and four-year colleges and universiti­es should also collaborat­e to enable students to transfer between institutio­ns without losing any credits. The colleges and universiti­es that promise recipients attend must also have the resources to provide high-quality education and support students through program completion.

If the Seattle Promise College Tuition Program and other free college promise programs are to create meaningful improvemen­ts in college attainment, then figuring out how to address college affordabil­ity as well as other barriers will be essential. Equally important, if not more, will be ensuring long-term financial sustainabi­lity.

Edward J. Smith and Elaine W. Leigh, of University of Pennsylvan­ia, contribute­d. This article was originally published on The Conversati­on.

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