Category Archives: Uncategorized

Four Myths About Financial Aid: Busted!

Too many students and their families have pre-conceived notions about receiving financial aid, thinking that their income is either too high or too low. A strategic approach can mean real savings. So much depends on the particular colleges to which students apply, and even the fields they intend to study. Many universities are now offering recruitment […]

“Show Me the Money!” It’s All About Demographics

An important fact that many students, parents, counselors and teachers fail to understand is the critical role individual demographics play in  eligibility for free money for college.  Since there are tens of thousands of different scholarships, grants, fellowships and institutional forms of aid out there for US college-bound teens to navigate, the odds have been […]

$11.2M in Matching Aid for a Single Student: Here’s How

February 19, 2019 GATE’s financial aid support in tandem with Red Kite helps students find how much free money for college? Glad you asked. In considering a single student example, above, on the basis of demographic descriptors captured within the GATE College System solution, this is a typical example of a student who’s begun working […]

Leadership Toward Educational Equity and Access to Higher Education (a 3-part series)

Part Three. Putting it All Together: Aligning Public, Private and Philanthropic Stakeholders to Transform America’s College Access Inequities The time has come for leaders to increase equitable access to higher education, particularly for disadvantaged students in America. This third and final article in the series will argue the need for shared accountability. It will also explore […]

Leadership Toward Educational Equity and Access to Higher Education (a 3-part series)

Part Two: Counselor Realities Because accurate, effective mentorship is so critical to establishing college readiness for first generation students, the National Association of College Admissions Counselors recommends a ratio of no more than 250 students to 1 counselor (NACAC, 2018). Many public high schools would have to double or even triple the amount of on-site […]

Leadership Toward Educational Equity and Access to Higher Education (a 3-part series)

Part One: The Dream Most Americans believe the American dream—that is, the ideal that every U.S. citizen should have an equal opportunity to achieve success and prosperity through hard work, determination, and initiative—is within reach, according to the Pew Research Center. Samantha Smith there reports that only 17% say the American dream is “out of […]