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Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert Bozick, Gabriella Gonzalez, and John Engberg RAND Corporation November 2012 *This study was supported partially by the R. K. Mellon Foundation and The Heinz Endowments to the Pittsburgh Promise. All analyses and commentary are strictly those of the authors.

Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert

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Page 1: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert

Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District:

The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise*

Robert Bozick, Gabriella Gonzalez, and John Engberg

RAND Corporation

November 2012

*This study was supported partially by the R. K. Mellon Foundation and The Heinz Endowments to the Pittsburgh Promise. All analyses and commentary

are strictly those of the authors.

Page 2: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert

The Pittsburgh Promise

• Support: $100 million from the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center

• Inception: First made available to class of 2008

• Award: $5,000 a year, up to four years

• Eligibility: Resident of Pittsburgh attending and graduating from a public or charter high school, meeting academic requirements

*Research Objective: Does the Promise improve rates of college enrollment among high school graduates in Pittsburgh?

Page 3: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert

Data

• Pittsburgh Public School District administrative data to determine scholarship eligibility and sociodemographic background

• National Student Clearinghouse data to determine college enrollment

• Public school graduates from the classes of 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2010

• N = 8,718

Page 4: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert

Eligibility Requirements

Page 5: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert

Eligibility Distribution

Page 6: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert
Page 7: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert

Difference-in-Difference Estimation

η = difference-in-difference parameter

X = sex, race, free/reduced price lunch, age, English proficiency

τ = annual unemployment rate

ν = fixed-effects

Page 8: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert

Logistic Regression Predicting College Enrollment

Page 9: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert
Page 10: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert

Summary of Findings

• No Direct Overall Effect: Eligible students as likely to attend college before and after the scholarship was introduced

….but…

• Increase in Enrollment at Four-Year In-State Schools

• Caution: It is still early, the program is gaining traction

Page 11: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert

Next Steps

• Award Increased: $5,000 to $10,000 a year

• Additional Incentives: Dependent on PSSA scores

• Regression Discontinuity: Eligibility and geo-spatial cut-points

• New Haven Promise: Behavioral requirements and full tuition

Page 12: Using a Merit-Based Scholarship Program to Increase Rates of College Enrollment in an Urban School District: The Case of the Pittsburgh Promise* Robert