Educational Opportunities for Working Students

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IMPROVING EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS WHO WORK Laura W. Perna, University of Pennsylvania* Michelle Asha Cooper, University of Maryland, College Park Chunyan Li, University of Pennsylvania May 2006 *Address all correspondence to: Laura W. Perna Associate Professor Graduate School of Education University of Pennsylvania 3700 Walnut Street, Room 424 Philadelphia PA 19104 215.746.2522 lperna@gse.upenn.edu IMPROVING EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS WHO WORK College students who cannot pay the price of attendance from some combination of personal financial resources and grants typically have three options: do not attend college, borrow money using public and private loans, and/or work. Data show that increasing shares of students are utilizing both loans and work to pay for college-related expenses (Baum, 2005). Much attention has focused on growth in borrowing (e.g., Baum, 2005; Perna, 2001), as well as potential consequences of borrowing for various aspects of students’ educational experiences, including persistence and degree completion (DesJardins, Ahlburg, & McCall, 2002; St. John, 2003) and graduate school enrollment (Choy & Carroll, 2000; Ehrenberg, 1991; Fox, 1992; Perna, 2004; Weiler, 1991). Less attention has focused on the consequences of working, even though most students work some number of hours while they are enrolled, regardless of the type of institution they attend (Choy & Berker, 2003; King & Bannon, 2002; McMillion, 2005; NPSAS:04). The percentage of full-time college students who are employed has increased steadily over the past three decades, rising from 36 percent in 1973 to 48 percent in 2003 (Fox, Connolly, & Snyder as cited in Baum, 2005). The share of full-time college students who work at least 20 hours each week has also been growing, rising from 17 percent in 1973 to 30 percent in 2003 (Fox et al. as

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