Published online in:
Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis
July 20, 2017
Dennis A. Kramer II and Michael R. Holcomb, University of Florida
Robert Kelchen, Seton Hall University
Abstract
The growth of the public discourse on college completion and student debt has pushed policymakers
and institutional leaders to implement a variety of policies aimed at incentivizing student completion.
This article examines state-adopted excess credit hour (ECH) policies on student completion
and median debt outcomes. Using a quasi-experimental approach, we find little evidence that ECH
policies positively affect student completion. However, we find statistically large estimates that
adoption of ECH policies increase median student debt. Students from marginalized backgrounds
(i.e., first-generation and low-income) appear to be most adversely affected by ECH policies. As
states face constant pressures for resources, the adoption of tuition-based surcharges does not significantly
alter student course-taking behaviors, rather shifts the cost burdens from the state to the
individual student for perceived inefficiencies in students’ course-taking behaviors.
Read the news release —"State-Adopted Credit Hour Policies Associated with Increases in Student Debt but Not Graduation Rates"— here.