Higher Education
Overview
Access to postsecondary education can transform a student’s life. But students seeking a bachelor’s, associate degree or other postsecondary credential often face financial roadblocks, including high costs that lead them into student debt. The risk and responsibility of paying for higher education has shifted from the public to individuals. Yet, this burden falls disproportionately on students of color due to the racial wealth gap. The average white household has ten times the wealth of Black households due to generations of exclusionary policies that bolstered economic opportunity for some while limiting it for others. Enacting policies that improve higher education access and completion, such as funding need-based aid and scholarships, will benefit individual Georgians while strengthening the entire state.
Featured
Resources on Need-Based Aid
Jennifer Lee
January 12, 2022
2022 Policy Priorities
Caitlin Highland
December 13, 2021
A Need-Based Financial Aid Program for Georgia
Jennifer Lee
November 2, 2021
Breaking Down the Federal Recovery Proposal
Caitlin Highland
September 30, 2021
How Federal Higher Education Proposals Affect Georgia
Jennifer Lee
September 1, 2021
2021 Fast Facts on HOPE
Jennifer Lee
July 19, 2021
A Brief History of HOPE
Jennifer Lee
July 16, 2021
Keeping and Losing HOPE
Jennifer Lee
July 1, 2021
Issue Experts

Ashley Young
Education Analyst
Former Authors

Jennifer Lee
Former Senior Policy Analyst, Higher Education

Claire Suggs
Former Senior Policy Analyst