Isko U Chapter II
Isko U Chapter II
Isko U Chapter II
This chapter contains the relevant ideas to the proposed title. It helps the proponents in
building the foundation for the proposed title. To dig deeper about our topic and to come up with
ideas that will help us improve the features of the proposed system. This is to familiarize the
number of benefits for recipients. From reducing the financial burden of the rising costs of a
college education, to allowing students more time and energy to focus on studies rather than part-
time work, scholarships are one piece in the puzzle of what creates a strong foundation for
supporting students in their success in pursuing a degree, and furthermore, completing that
degree.
The most obvious benefit of scholarships is that they make college more
affordable. From this larger, overarching benefit comes many more benefits. As college costs
continue to rise, a major deterrent to pursuing, and finishing, a college degree is affordability.
Scholarships can give students the financial bump needed to take a leap and enroll in a degree, as
well as a boost to morale and a student's confidence in their ability to work toward a better
dedicated to providing education and research that informs sound, evidence based policies and
programs geared toward improving the lives of underserved and underprivileged populations.
One of MDRC's areas of focus is in Higher Education. Their publication "Piecing Together the
College Affordability Puzzle" notes that given the drastic increase in costs for attending college,
it's not surprising that students from low-income backgrounds have lower enrollment and
completion rates. According to a study from the National Center for Higher Education
Management Systems, even after applying financial aid, families in the lowest income quintile
still needed to contribute, on average, over 60% of net family income to covering the costs of
tuition and fees. Relative to the degree to which this income covers the basic cost of living,
college affordability, or lack thereof, becomes a huge factor in low-income students not being
able to finish their degrees. MDRC references a number of studies that showed correlations of
higher dropout rates among students with unmet need versus students with no unmet need.
Scholarships also contribute to student success by allowing for more financial flexibility
in terms of the need for a student to hold a job throughout college. This necessity can impede a
student's success because jobs require time and energy spent away from schoolwork and other
academic responsibilities. In addition, the extra time spent working a part-time job reduces time
that could be spent taking advantage of the vast amount of experiential learning opportunities
that colleges and universities offer, such as RSO (registered student organization) involvement,
scholarships can have a "pay-it-forward" effect in terms of encouraging students to either begin
scholarship application process, or continue their work in such initiatives in order to maintain
eligibility for receiving scholarships. Merit-based scholarships often require that students enroll
in a certain number of hours and maintain certain grade-point averages. These requirements
make receiving financial aid an active, rather than passive process that gives students an
incentive to perform academically and work consistently toward completing their degree within
four years. As a result, the faster a student finishes their degree, the lower the cost of that degree.
The development of educational opportunities throughout the world, as well as the rise in
population in terms of increasing birth rates and a decreasing prevalence of epidemics and
plagues common in the 20th century, has led to an increase in government and private-based
percentage points of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), in the United States mounted to 5.4%,
6.0% in the United Kingdom, 6.6% in Sweden, 5.7% in South Africa, 5.6% in Slovenia, 6.9% in
Norway, 9.1% in Moldova, an astounding 12.8% in Cuba, among other states (World Bank,
2015). Hence, education has been cherished as a vital element of government programs and a
key factor in winning electorate votes. According to UNESCO Institute for Statistics, the
majority of the aforementioned financial investments have been directed towards the reforming
of educational systems and the improvement of the infrastructure of public schools. Furthermore,
in many of these developed countries, Bachelor studies both in public and private institutions are
subject to scholarship funds that seek to help students develop during their academic studies.
The idea of developing an e-scholarship system was born out of the fact that the
methodologies of the existing system is a manual process hence the adoption of a new system to
help the scholarship board better manage its processes of application and awarding scholarship
which makes it possible for applicants to apply for scholarship anytime, anywhere and receive
The main purpose of this project is to develop an online web-based system which can
facilitate the processes of various scholarship applications. In addition, the system can also
provide different functionalities for different kinds of users including students, guidance
directors, committee members and administrators. This project emphasizes the convenience for
these users who participate in the scholarship application procedure to access this web-based
system. In addition, the workload for the UW-L Foundation Office can be effectively and
considerably reduced.
Alon’s findings highlight a pattern identified in other studies that the type of aid
administered to students may affect the relationship between financial support and academic
success and account for some variation across studies. For example, Hochstein and Butler found
that loans were negatively associated with college persistence, while grants had a positive effect
on retention. Using a 1991 entering cohort sample of students eligible for merit scholarships at a
college of fine arts, Schuh found that, after accounting for SAT/ACT composite scores, high
school GPA, and Stafford Loan eligibility, the amount of merit award was the only variable that
significantly predicted graduation. This suggests that monies that do not need to be repaid may
For what concerns the case of Italy, the evidence is not uniform and the present study
ought to provide new insights on the issue. In particular, Garibaldi et al. (2012) find that an
increase in college cost, in response to delayed graduation, exerts a remarkable effect on the on-
time completion rate, using evidence from Bocconi University. In line with this evidence, I find
that monetary incentives speed up the number of credits a student achieves in the first year of the
degree without prejudice to, but actually increasing, average grades. This effect can arguably
help the “Fuori Corso” problem. In other words, the need-based scholarship leads low-income
students to exert more efforts in order to meet minimum credit requirements and to avoid losing
REFERENCES
https://www.offa.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Literature-review-PDF.pdf
https://www.givainc.com/blog/index.cfm/2015/1/23/Effects-of-Scholarships-on-Student-Success
https://minds.wisconsin.edu/bitstream/handle/1793/52484/Wen-Kai%20Shen.pdf?sequence=1
https://www.hindawi.com/journals/edri/2011/743120/
http://amsacta.unibo.it/4083/1/WP968.pdf