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Experimental Evidence on "Direct Admissions" from Four States: Impacts on College Application and Enrollment

Complexity and uncertainty in the college application process contribute to longstanding racial and socioeconomic disparities in enrollment. We leverage a large-scale experiment that combines an early guarantee of college admission with a proactive nudge, fee waiver, and structural application simplification to test the impacts of emerging “direct admissions” policies on students’ college-going behaviors. Students in the intervention were 2.7 percentage points (or 12%) more likely to submit a college application, with larger impacts for racially minoritized, first-generation, and low-income students. Students were most responsive to automatic offers from larger, higher quality institutions on the application margin, but were not more likely to subsequently enroll. In the face of growing adoption, we show this low-cost, low-touch intervention can move the needle on important college-going behaviors but is insufficient alone to increase enrollment given other barriers to access, including the ability to pay for college.

Keywords
College access, Common App, direct admissions, post-secondary education, experiment, nudging
Education level
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/6xtn-2j84

EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:

Odle, Taylor, and Jennifer Delaney. (). Experimental Evidence on "Direct Admissions" from Four States: Impacts on College Application and Enrollment. (EdWorkingPaper: 23-834). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/6xtn-2j84

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