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In 2012, the College Access Foundation of California announced an expansion of its grantmaking strategy to address the growing financial needs of California’s low-income student population. This new blueprint provides additional details about the Foundation’s efforts to reach more students through a broader grantmaking strategy.
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Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact 1
Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact
{ COLLEGE ACCESS FOUNDATION of CALIFORNIA
Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact 2
A Message from the President
At the College Access Foundation of California, we focus on helping low-income students pursue and
complete a college education. Between 2005 and 2011, the Foundation awarded over $71 million in
grants to college access organizations across the state, supporting over 30,000 scholarships for col-
lege students with financial need.
During that time, we used scholarships as our primary tool for promoting enrollment and graduation
for students from low-income families and communities. For many, scholarships made the difference
between going to college or not, or the difference between attending a four-year university or a com-
munity college.
Most of our scholarship recipients came from low-performing high schools with minimal college prep-
aration and advising. Over 80 percent of our scholarship recipients were the first in their families to
go to college. Approximately three-quarters of these students enrolled in four-year colleges and uni-
versities. Of the students who entered college in 2008, over 80 percent were still in college two
years later.
We take great pride in helping these students go to
college. But despite the success, we also understand
that our focus on scholarships has its limitations.
Compared to public and institutional aid, our Founda-
tion scholarships only cover a fraction of the cost of
college. Moreover, given the Foundation’s resources,
we can only offer scholarships to a small portion of
the state’s growing low-income student population.
California faces a widening college achievement gap at a time when higher education is increasingly
important to securing the state’s economic future. In the face of this challenge, the Foundation has
an important opportunity—and responsibility—to maximize its impact and help more students realize a
college education.
The following is an overview of the Foundation’s new strategic direction. It details how we plan to ad-
dress the growing financial needs California’s low-income students currently face. We look forward to
working with our grantee partners, our colleagues and our friends as we implement this new strategy,
and we welcome your feedback and ideas as we move forward to help more students across the
state.
Julia I. Lopez
President and CEO, College Access Foundation of California
The Foundation has an
important opportunity—and
responsibility—to maximize its
impact and help more students
realize a college education. {
Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact 3
As the largest economy in the United States,
and the ninth largest economy in the world,
California is a driving force behind the na-
tion’s economic engine. But despite gains in
recent decades, California is not keeping up
with the growing educational demands of its
economy.
{ Evolving to Meet California’s Challenges
Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact 4
Mirroring trends across the country, California’s economy increasingly depends on a highly-educated
workforce with at least some college education. This rising demand coincides with a growing gap in col-
lege enrollment and completion across the state. Today, California ranks 40th in the nation in the per-
centage of high school graduates who go directly to college.1 It ranks 46th in the percentage of the
state’s college-age population earning bachelor’s degrees.2
Improving college achievement is critical to preserving
our economic future. But despite the need for more
college graduates, California’s low-income students
often lack the information and guidance they need to
overcome the academic, cultural and financial obsta-
cles they face on their path to college success.
Today, half of California’s high school students are
from low-income families, and they increasingly identi-
fy college affordability among their top concerns.
Most of these students attend high schools that lack
access to college and financial aid advising, leaving
many with the perception that college is beyond their
reach. Absent clear guidance and information about
publicly available financial aid such as Pell Grants, Cal
Grants, and Board of Governors Fee Waivers, many
students either do not apply for aid, or they fail to
maximize the financial aid awards for which they
would qualify.3
During the 2009-2010 academic year for example,
hundreds of thousands of eligible California Community College students did not apply for Pell Grants,
leaving up to $500 million in estimated financial aid unclaimed.4 These grants could have helped stu-
dents pay for tuition and fees, textbooks, housing, food, and transportation. Students who fail to maxim-
ize their financial aid have difficulty paying for school and may unduly increase their student debt burden.
They are less likely to earn a degree or transfer to a four-year institution.
In addition to financial aid, low-income college students—especially students who are the first in the fami-
ly to go to school—often lack the support and the know-how they need to navigate the transition from high
school to college. As a result, these students graduate at lower rates than their peers. Providing them
with the support and information they need to access campus services and engage on campus, both aca-
demically and socially, can help keep these students on their path to graduation.5
Guided and informed by our experience, we are eager to engage our grantee partners in new efforts that
reach beyond our scholarship recipients to offer financial aid information and college completion support
to more low-income students across California. Together, we can address these issues and significantly
increase post-secondary achievement for students who might not otherwise consider college.
California’s Growing
Enrollment & Completion Gap
40th in the nation in the percentage
of high school graduates who
go directly to college
46th in percentage of its college-age
population earning bachelor’s
degrees
We are eager to engage our grantee partners in new efforts that reach beyond
our scholarship students and support more low-income populations across
California. {
Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact 5
Facing a growing number of low-income stu-
dents for whom college degrees remain elu-
sive, the Foundation recently refocused its
grantmaking strategies. These new strategies
emphasize financial aid literacy and post-
enrollment support to increase college access
and success for more students.
{ Broadening Our Grantmaking Strategy
Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact 6
Making Financial Aid Accessible
Students who understand the financial aid process and access the financial aid that is available to
them are far more likely to attend college and persist through graduation. Unfortunately, low-income
and first-generation college students are often the least likely to have access to this type of infor-
mation.6
To tackle this information gap, the Foundation pursues two strategies. The first focuses on helping
more students submit and complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). The second
aims to provide more students with access to financial aid advising.
FAFSA Completion
Completing the FAFSA is essential for students to
qualify for public financial aid. But without assis-
tance and support, students and their families are
less likely to invest the time and attention needed
to successfully complete the FAFSA.7
With this in mind, the Foundation funds and sup-
ports organizations working on FAFSA completion
efforts in high schools and school districts with
large low-income student populations. Our strategy
aims to make completing the FAFSA and applying
for financial aid a priority for all high school stu-
dents in California. We believe this will increase
access to college for students who wouldn’t other-
wise be aware of the financial aid available to
them.
Financial Aid Advising
For students who face significant economic barri-
ers on the path to college, financial aid is the key to
affordability. Unfortunately, the under-resourced
schools that many of these students attend do not
offer the counseling and advising they need.8
The Foundation hopes to bridge this gap by provid-
ing funds and support to organizations that can
provide advising services and support to help sig-
nificant numbers of these students obtain financial
aid. Building on the services already offered to stu-
dents who receive Foundation scholarships, this
strategy seeks to extend financial aid services be-
yond the scholarship students we have traditionally
reached.
Financial Aid Strategy
Help More Students
Complete the FAFSA
The Foundation supports
organizations working on
FAFSA completion efforts in
high schools and school
districts with large low-
income student populations.
Financial Aid Strategy
Improve Financial
Aid Advising
The Foundation funds and
supports organizations that
help significant numbers
of low-income students
obtain public financial aid.
Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact 7
Providing Support to Boost Completion
A striking number of California students who
enroll in college do not graduate. Only half of
the students in the California State University
system graduate in six years.9 In California’s
community colleges, the vast majority of stu-
dents who enroll never complete an associate’s
degree or transfer to a four-year institution.10
The disparities for underrepresented minority
students is even more striking. Only 46 percent
of black students and 53 percent of Latino stu-
dents at California’s four-year institutions gradu-
ate within six years, compared with 62 percent
of white students.11
The Foundation’s third strategy aims to tackle
this issue by supporting and engaging students
on their path to a degree. Low-income college
students—especially students who are the first
in the family to go to college—are more likely to graduate when they have access to support systems
that help guide them through the transition to college life. This support helps them engage aca-
demically and socially on campus, and vastly improves their persistence toward a degree.12
The Foundation seeks to fund efforts that provide low-income college students with this assistance.
We support organizations seeking to implement innovative and collaborative tools, resources, and
programming that bolster services that increase graduation rates among low-income college stu-
dents.
Scholarships
The Foundation remains committed to scholarship grantmaking as a valuable tool for expanding
access and promoting success. We will continue to award scholarship funding for organizations
that align with our new strategies, and we will prioritize our scholarship grants for organizations that
leverage our funding to expand access to financial aid and improve the postsecondary prospects of
all of the students with whom they work.
Where we continue to invest in scholarships, we expect to see increasing rates of college persis-
tence and completion for the students we support.
Completion Strategy
Provide More
Support Services
for College Students
The Foundation funds and
supports efforts that
bolster services to increase
graduation rates among
low-income college students.
The Foundation remains committed to scholarship grantmaking as a valuable
tool for expanding access and promoting success. {
Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact 8
What We Fund
The Foundation awards grants to organizations that share our commitment to expanding opportunities for
more low-income students, beyond those we have traditionally served with our scholarships. This funding
may be program support, support for new or expanding collaboration efforts, scholarship grants or support
for programs, resources or tools that improve financial aid advising or college completion efforts.
The Outcomes We Expect to See
The Foundation’s strategic shift reflects our firm commitment to narrowing the gap that is keeping a grow-
ing number of low-income Californians out of college. Where we invest to help more students complete
the FAFSA and provide more students with financial aid advising, we expect to reduce the financial barrier
to college access and completion. We anticipate that more of these high school graduates will access all
of the public aid that is available to them and enroll in college.
We believe college access programs across the state are well positioned to provide financial aid advising
and college support resources for the local communities where they work. With our funding, we aim to
support this effort and we hope to create opportunities for low-income students and families to access the
resources they need to go to college. We also hope to see our grantees working with schools and school
districts to prioritize college-going and FAFSA-completion as part of a common mission.
Where the Foundation invests in post-enrollment support services and resources, we expect to gradually
close the gap in graduation rates, so that low-income and historically underrepresented college students
graduate from college at the same rate as their highest achieving peers.
Scholarships
Scholarship Grants
Program Support for Scholarship Programs
FAFSA Completion & Financial Aid Advising
Program Support
Capacity-Building Support
Student Support Toward Completion
Innovative & Collaborative Tools,
Resources & Program Support
What We Fund: Strategies for Reaching More Low-Income Students
Mo
re Stu
den
ts Serv
ed
Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact 9
Evaluation to Advance Access & Success
As we implement our new strategies, we believe there is great value in testing new ideas and approach-
es and sharing the lessons learned with others who share our same commitment to college access and
completion. Clear and credible information about the impact of our work not only benefits our partner-
ships and programs, it provides evidence for the value of similar public and private investments to im-
prove college achievement statewide.
To learn from these efforts, we remain committed to collecting and analyzing qualitative and quantita-
tive data related to our desired outcomes from the organizations we fund. We hope our analysis will
uncover lessons that regularly inform and improve our effectiveness and the success of our partner-
ships.
We seek measurable improvements in the number of students who access financial aid, attend college
and ultimately graduate. For our scholarship students, we continue to track individual data on academ-
ic progress and use of public financial aid. For the students we reach through our new strategic efforts,
we seek to work with our grantees to find useful data points that accurately reflect our outcomes.
1 Johnson, Hans. “Higher Education in California: New Goals for the Master Plan.” Public Policy Institute of California. 2010. http://
www.ppic.org/content/pubs/report/R_410HJR.pdf.
2 Brown, Michael and Christopher Edley, et al. “California at a Crossroads: Confronting the Looming Threat to Achievement, Access and Equi-
ty at the University of California and Beyond.” 2006. http://berkeley.edu/news/berkeleyan/2006/11/images/Brown_Edley.pdf
3 Kantrowitz, Mark. “Analysis of Why Some Students Do Not Apply for Financial Aid.” 2009. http://www.finaid.org/
educators/20090427CharacteristicsOfNonApplicants.pdf; Long, Bridget Terry. “Breaking the Affordability Barrier: How much of the college
access problem is attributable to lack of information about financial aid?” 2009. http://www.highereducation.org/crosstalk/ct1209/
voices1209-btlong.shtml.
4 The Institute for College Access and Success. “Financial Aid Facts at California Community Colleges.” 2010. http://www.ticas.org/files/
pub/ccc_fact_sheet.pdf.
5 Engle, Jennifer, and Vincent Tinto. The Pell Institute. “Moving Beyond Access: College Success for Low-Income, First-Generation Students.”
2008. http://faculty.soe.syr.edu/vtinto/Files/Moving Beyond Access.pdf.
6 Pullias Center for Higher Education at the USC Rossier School of Education. “Putting Money on the Table: Information, Financial Aid and
Access to College.” http://www.uscrossier.org/pullias/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/CHEPA_Putting_Money_on_the_Table.pdf.
7 Bettinger, Eric, Bridget Terry Long, et al. "The Role of Simplification and Information in College Decisions: Results from the H&R Block FAF-
SA Experiment." 2009. http://www.nber.org/papers/w15361; The College Board. “The Financial Aid Challenge: Successful Practices that
Address the Underutilization of Financial Aid in Community Colleges.” 2010. http://advocacy.collegeboard.org/sites/default/
files/10b_1790_FAFSA_Exec_Report_WEB_100517.pdf
8 Burdman, Pamela. "The Student Debt Dilemma: Debt Aversion as a Barrier to College Access." 2005. http://projectonstudentdebt.org/
files/pub/DebtDilemma.pdf.
9 Institute for Higher Education Leadership and Policy. “Student Flow Analysis: CSU Student Progress Toward Graduation.” 2009. http://
www.csus.edu/ihelp/PDFs/R_CSU_MOA_excerpt.pdf.
10 Institute for Higher Education Leadership and Policy. “Divided We Fail: Improving Completion and Closing Racial Gaps in California's Com-
munity Colleges.” 2010. http://www.csus.edu/ihelp/PDFs/R_Div_We_Fail_1010.pdf.
11 The National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education. “Measuring Up 2008: The State Report Card on Higher Education, California.”
2008. http://measuringup2008.highereducation.org/print/state_reports/long/CA.pdf.
12 Engle, Jennifer, and Vincent Tinto. The Pell Institute. “Moving Beyond Access: College Success for Low-Income, First-Generation Students.”
2008. http://faculty.soe.syr.edu/vtinto/Files/Moving Beyond Access.pdf.
To learn more about the College Access Foundation of California or to submit a new grant inquiry, visit
www.col legeaccessfoundat ion.org
Broadening Our Approach & Expanding Our Impact 10
COLLEGE ACCESS FOUNDATION of CALIFORNIA
One Front Street, Suite 1325, San Francisco, CA 94111
www.collegeaccessfoundation.org │ Follow us on Twitter: @CollegeAccessCA
© 2012, College Access Foundation of California
To learn more about the College Access Foundation of California visit
www.col legeaccessfoundat ion.org