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    <subfield code="a">Hyman, Joshua </subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Can light-touch college-going interventions make a difference? Evidence from a statewide experiment in michigan</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Journal of Policy Analysis and Management</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">39(1), Winter, 2020: p.159-190</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">I conduct a statewide experiment in Michigan with nearly 50,000 high&#x2010;achieving high school seniors. Treated students are mailed a letter encouraging them to consider college and providing them with the web address of a college information website. I find that very high&#x2010;achieving, low&#x2010;income students, and very high&#x2010;achieving, minority students are the most likely to navigate to the website. Small changes to letter content affect take&#x2010;up. For example, highlighting college affordability induces 18 percent more students to the website than highlighting college choice, and 37 percent more than highlighting how to apply to college. I find a statistically precise zero impact on college enrollment among all students who were mailed the letter. However, low&#x2010;income students experience a small increase in the probability that they enroll in college, driven by increases at four&#x2010;year institutions. An examination of persistence through college, while imprecise, suggests that the students induced into college by the intervention persist at a lower rate than the inframarginal student.- Reproduced

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    <subfield code="h">39(1), Winter, 2020: p.159-190</subfield>
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