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Cambridge, MA -- March 15, 2006 -- A new study, "MCAS
Scores and the Adams Scholarships: A Policy Failure," released
today by The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University and the
Center for the Study of Higher Education at The Pennsylvania State
University finds that the newly-created John and Abigail Adams Scholarship
program in Massachusetts is likely to have little impact on college
access in the state. The study, conducted by Penn State education
professor Donald E. Heller, finds that few racial minority and poor
students in Massachusetts are qualifying for the scholarships. This
finding is particularly important in the wake of tuition prices
which have increased an average of 78 percent at the University
of Massachusetts and the state colleges over the last four years.
The Adams Scholarships are awarded based solely on students’
performance in the 10th grade English and math tests of the Massachusetts
Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS). The scholarships provide
free tuition (but not fees) for up to four years at any public higher
education institution in the Commonwealth. Heller analyzed four
years of MCAS data from the Massachusetts Department of Education
(which included over 60,000 students each year) to determine the
rates at which students from different racial and class groups qualify
for the scholarships. He found large gaps in the scholarship qualification
rates across these groups. For example, while 25 percent of White
10th graders in 2005 attained MCAS scores necessary to qualify for
a scholarship, only eight percent of African American and eight
percent of Hispanic students across the state attained the necessary
scores.
Heller also found that only 10 percent of students in Massachusetts
who participate in the national School Lunch Program – whose
family incomes were below $35,000 (for a family of four) –
qualified for Adams Scholarships. In comparison, 26 percent of students
not participating in the lunch program qualified for scholarships.
The starkest contrast in scholarship qualification rates was between
students who had either limited English proficiency (LEP) or some
form of disability, and those students who did not. While fewer
than 3 percent of disabled or LEP students had MCAS scores high
enough to qualify for the scholarships, 27 percent – or proportionally
nine times as many – non-disabled nor LEP students qualified.
“The results of this study demonstrate that the students
who historically have had the lowest college going rates –
minority, lower-income, and educationally disadvantaged students
– are those least likely to qualify for an Adams Scholarship,”
said Heller, one of the nation’s leading experts on financial
aid and college access. “This is an inefficient and ineffective
use of public dollars to promote college attendance in the state.
Massachusetts would be better off investing the money spent on this
program in its existing need-based grants if it is interested in
closing the gaps in college attendance in the Commonwealth.”
The findings from this study have relevance for states other than
Massachusetts. “States that are considering implementing merit
scholarship programs should be careful when deciding what criteria
to use for awarding the scholarships,” Heller reported. “The
use of criteria that result in large gaps in the awards, as found
in Massachusetts, will similarly disadvantage students in other
states.”
Gary Orfield, Director of The Civil Rights Project and Professor
at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, said, “Massachusetts
needs to get serious about college access and civil rights. With
a stagnant population, growing minority communities with segregated
and inferior schools and an economy that has few low skill jobs,
we simply must educate our people. To poorly support the students
who cannot afford the soaring costs, while shifting state funds
to privileged white students whose families could easily pay, undermines
our future.”
The full study,
“MCAS Scores and the Adams Scholarships: A Policy Failure,”
can be downloaded here
(PDF File)
Donald Heller
deh29@psu.edu
Office: (814) 865-9756
Professor
Gary Orfield
Cell: (617) 359-2892
Office: (617) 495-1898
Email: orfield@gmail.com (preferred)
Email: orfielga@gse.harvard.edu
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