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Increasing Financial Aid Awards with Reminders

General Information

Project description

Challenge
Research suggests that some students—including low-income, underrepresented minority, and first generation students—avoid applying for financial aid due to a combination of psychological reasons. Some are overwhelmed by the complexity of the process, while others worry they’ll feel out of place in college or be stigmatized for their socio-economic background. These psychological factors can cause students to avoid applying for aid, or fail to complete their financial aid applications on time.

Design

Students were instructed to download a smartphone app that, over a period of weeks, delivered timely reminders and simple instructions about important deadlines and upcoming tasks related to applying for financial aid. The reminders simplified the application process into manageable tasks they could complete over a series of weeks.

Another group of students downloaded a smartphone app that sent them reminders about study skills instead of financial aid.

Impact
A randomized evaluation showed that students who received reminders about the financial aid application through the app were more likely to complete and submit an application.

Their rate of completing financial aid applications was 15 percentage points higher than students who received study skills reminders (82% vs. 67%). These interventions also translated into more financial aid awards among those students who applied—presumably because students who received the simplified financial aid instructions were more likely to complete their applications more effectively. Students who received financial aid reminders were 29 percentage points more likely to be awarded financial aid: 65% of them received aid compared to just 36% of students who received the study skills reminders.

Source: B-Hub

Detailed information

Final report: Is there a final report presenting the results and conclusions of this project?

Yes

Final report

Pre-analysis plan: Is there a pre-analysis plan associated with this registration?

No

Additional information

<h3>Does a third party implement the intervention or is this a collaboration with another team?</h3><div class="csp"><p>San Jose High School</p> </div>

Who is behind the project?

Institution: Ideas42
Team: Ideas42

Project status:

Completed

Methods

Methodology: Experiment, Field Experiment
Could you self-grade the strength of the evidence generated by this study?: 1
Start date: 09/01/2015

What is the project about?

Policy area(s): Education
Topic(s): Services Uptake, Financial Aids
Behavioural tool(s): Checklists, Reminders

Date published:

25 June 2021

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