Picture of author.

About the Author

Sara Goldrick-Rab is a "defender of impoverished students and a scholar of their struggles," according to the Chronicle of Higher Education, and one of the fifty most important "doers, thinkers, and visionaries transforming American politics" according to Politico. She is professor of higher show more education policy and sociology at Temple University, where she leads efforts to find effective approaches to making college more accessible and more affordable. Follow her on Twitter @saragoldrickrab. show less

Includes the name: Sara Goldrick-Rob

Image credit: "Sara Goldrick-Rab, professor in Madison, Wisconsin" by Tomas Uribe

Works by Sara Goldrick-Rab

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Common Knowledge

Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Fairfax, Virginia, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Virginia, USA

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Reviews

3 reviews
I read this because although I'm teaching at an American institution right now, I was an undergrad in a different country (one with free tuition), and felt I needed to know more about how financial aid works in the US in order to better understand my students' situation. It turns out that pretty much every teacher in higher ed, regardless of background, needs to read this book. Goldrick Rab presents a damning indictment of the convoluted current system of FAFSA, Pell Grants, work-study show more placements and so on, which often serve to cushion those from wealthy backgrounds and to punish those from poor backgrounds for trying to succeed. (I gasped at the cruelty of the system in Milwaukee, where a young woman who had lived her whole life with her mother in subsidised housing was told that she would be evicted for being a full-time student; part-time, fine, unemployed, okay, but full-time and therefore graduating on time with less debt? No.) Rather than blaming Entitled Millennials, Goldrick Rab points the finger squarely at a rigged system.

Far too many American students are homeless, far too many are going to class hungry, far too many are failing classes because they're so exhausted from working long hours trying to pay for those classes in the first place. For all the claims of American exceptionalism, the USA lags far behind many other countries in college graduation rates (and indeed in social mobility). There's no one solution to all of these problems, but Goldrick Rab rightly urges that colleges and the federal and state government at least start to recognise that they exist.
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If you are at all interested in the process of financial aid in higher education, this is a useful book. I work with a lot of college students who depend on financial aid to make higher education and its resulting benefits possible. Goldrick-Rab does a good job explaining why our current system isn't working for many students, why this is so, and she presents some alternative options. I do think it could benefit from additional research into the realities of developmental first year students show more and the financial realities faced by rural students, but that reflects more of my own day to day reality. I appreciate the author's detailed attention to important financial issues faced by our current students. show less
Great read on the challenges that college students and grads face as they navigate the costs of higher education in the US.

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Works
3
Members
108
Popularity
#179,296
Rating
4.1
Reviews
3
ISBNs
6

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