skip to navigation skip to content
WCER - Wisconsin Center for Education Research Skip Navigation accessibility
 
School of Education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison

ABOUT WCER NEWS Events Cover Stories Research News International Research Press WHAT'S THE RESEARCH ON...? PROJECTS All Active Projects All Completed Projects PUBLICATIONS LECTURE SERIES PEOPLE Staff Directory Project Leaders ERG - EVALUATION RESOURCES GROUP RESOURCES Conference Rooms Equipment GRANT SERVICES GRADUATE TRAINING SERVICE UNITS Director's Office Business Office Technical Services Printing & Mail EMPLOYMENT CONTACT INFO MyWCER WORKSPACE LOGIN

   
Home > News > Research News > Grants Correlated with More Student Persistence

Grants Correlated with More Student Persistence

August 1 , 2011

For the last three years, Sara Goldrick-Rab and Douglas Harris tracked a group of students who received grant money from the Fund for Wisconsin Scholars program, which provides a $3,500-a-year grant to some first-time, full-time students enrolled in the University of Wisconsin System. They found that the most disadvantaged group of students were more likely to stay in college if they received the Morgridge grant, compared to those who did not. For those receiving a grant, the chance of their persisting jumped from 55 to 72 percent. The money did not appear to have as much of an effect on students who entered college with a higher probability of succeeding—those with higher test scores and parents with bachelor’s degrees.  More information is available here.