THE COST OF OPPORTUNITY:

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H I G H E R E D U C AT I O N P O L I C Y FEBRUARY 2013 THE COST OF OPPORTUNITY: ACCESS TO COLLEGE FINANCIAL AID IN CALIFORNIA

The Cost of Opportunity: Access to College Financial Aid in California BY ORVILLE JACKSON Across California, there are high school students dreaming of being the first in their families to attend college. For these students and families, college presents a life-changing opportunity. Many of these students have to work to help pay household bills, and tuition for a fouryear college seems out of reach. They may know that financial aid is an option, but often the application process feels daunting. Some worry that applying for grants or loans will put their parents legal status in jeopardy. For these reasons, among others, tens of thousands of!"!#$%&"!''()*+!'&,$#)-&.-)/"-00').1!#+!2$/)#$"&#$)302)20) explore university programs each year. Instead, they may take a few classes at their local community college while working. These classes are affordable and can lead to a two-year degree, "$12&,"!2$4)01)21!3/5$1)20)!)50+16($!1)"0''$.$7)809$:$14)5$9) students actually complete these milestones even six years after enrolling. 1 LOST OPPORTUNITY Thousands of students may have made different choices if 2-$();3$9)2-$()9$1$)$'&.&<'$)501),3!3"&!')!&#4)!3#)2-!2)2-$&1) parents situation would not affect their eligibility. They may -!:$)!22$3#$#)03$)05)2-$),3!3"&!')!&#)!=='&"!2&03)901;/-0=/) provided by counselors at their high schools and spent 10+.-'()>?)%&3+2$/)20),'')0+2)2-$)3$"$//!1()!=='&"!2&037)8!#) 2-$()#03$)/04)2-0/$)/2+#$32/)%$$2&3.)!"!#$%&")!3#),3!3"&!') eligibility thresholds could have received up to $17,000 in federal and state grants money that could fuel their aspirations, and that they would never have to pay back. @01$)2-!3)A?)=$1"$32)05)*+!'&,$#)/2+#$32/)9-0)#&#)302).0)03)20)"0''$.$)"&2$#)&2/)"0/2)!3#)2-$)3$$#)501),3!3"&!')!&#)!/) key barriers, according to a 2008 national survey. Few of those students actually applied for aid. 2 In fact, there is a strong correlation between completing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) the application needed to be "03/&#$1$#)501),3!3"&!')!&#)/+"-)!/).1!32/4)901;6/2+#() jobs and student loans and attending college. 3, 4 While students must be academically prepared to attend college, they must also be able to afford the cost of postsecondary $#+"!2&037)B!#'(4)200)%!3()/2+#$32/)5!"$),3!3"&!')<!11&$1/)20) pursue a college education and many do not go simply because 2-$()'!";)&3501%!2&03)!<0+2),3!3"&!')!&#)0=2&03/7) SUMMARY OF FINDINGS In this report, we examine the rate at which California public -&.-)/"-00')/2+#$32/)!=='()501)5$#$1!')!3#)/2!2$)!&#7)C$),3#) that 54 percent of California high school seniors applied for federal aid for the 2012 13 year, and 50 percent applied for state Cal Grants, even though three-quarters of 12th-graders.1!#+!2$7)D"!#$%&"!''()!3#),3!3"&!''()*+!'&,$#)/2+#$32/)9-0) did not apply for Cal Grants left potentially hundreds 05)%&''&03/)05)#0''!1/)&3)/2!2$),3!3"&!')!&#)+32!==$#7 Orville Jackson, Ph.D. is a Senior Research Analyst at the Education Trust West 1 THE EDUCATION TRUST WEST THE COST OF OPPORTUNITY FEBRUARY 2013

Students attending California s highest poverty schools were no more likely to apply for aid than students attending other schools. This is not to say that application rates were similar across all schools: Some students, including many who are low-income, attend high schools where applying for,3!3"&!')!&#)&/)2-$)301%7)e-$/$)#&:$1/$)/"-00'/)-!:$)!)3+%<$1) of best practices in common: They closely monitor students "0%='$2&03)05),3!3"&!')!&#)!=='&"!2&03/F)/+==012)=!1$32/)!3#)/2+#$32/)&3)"0%='$2&3.)2-$&1)!=='&"!2&03/F)!3#)$55$"2&:$'() communicate with families about the application process. We conclude this report by suggesting ways in which other schools and districts across the state can learn from these schools, then offer recommendations to state education '$!#$1/)"-!1.$#)9&2-)$G=!3#&3.)!""$//)20)"0''$.$),3!3"&!') aid, so that all students especially California s low-income students, who comprise more than half of those in our public schools have the opportunity to attend college and pursue their dreams. APPLYING FOR FINANCIAL AID @0/2)/2+#$32/)<$.&3)2-$)=10"$//)05)!=='(&3.)501),3!3"&!') aid by completing the FAFSA, which is administered by the H7B7)I$=!12%$32)05)J#+"!2&03K/)05,"$)05)L$#$1!')B2+#$32)D&#) (FSA). Completing the FAFSA opens the door to numerous funding sources, such as Pell Grants. Many states, including California, use the FAFSA to determine eligibility for state,3!3"&!')!&#f)%!3()"0''$.$/)!'/0)+/$)2-$)ldlbd)20)#$2$1%&3$) eligibility for school aid. California students must complete two additional steps, besides completing the FAFSA, to be considered for state,3!3"&!')!&#)/+"-)!/)!)m!')n1!32o)e-$()%+/2)/+<%&2)2-$&1) GPA to the California Student Aid Commission (CSAC), and they must verify their high school graduation. California s M!')N1!32)=10.1!%)&/)2-$)'!1.$/2)/2!2$65+3#$#),3!3"&!')!&#) program in the U.S. It provides awards for use in two or four-year programs (Cal Grants A and B) as well as a separate.1!32)pm!')n1!32)mq)501)+/$)!2)"0%%+3&2()"0''$.$/)01)*+!'&,$#) vocational programs. Awards are guaranteed to high school graduates with at least a 2.0 GPA, who apply by the March 2 deadline, and who meet other eligibility requirements P&3"'+#&3.),3!3"&!')3$$#Q7)D)/$=!1!2$)/$2)05)"0%=$2&2&:$)M!') Grant A and B awards are available for students who are not graduating high school seniors or recent graduates. ANALYSIS REVEALS UNTAPPED RESOURCES, WIDE VARIATION ACROSS SCHOOLS Our original analysis of FAFSA and Cal Grant completion rates reveals that just half of California s public high school RS2-6.1!#$1/)!1$)"0%='$2&3.),3!3"&!')!&#)!=='&"!2&03/7) Overall, 54 percent of California s nearly 400,000 seniors "0%='$2$#)2-$)LDLBD)&3)2-$)S?RSTR>),3!3"&!')!&#)($!14)!3#) 50 percent applied for Cal Grants. Although national FAFSA rates are unavailable for comparison, some states publish their completion rates. California s application rate is similar to that of other states, such as Colorado and Illinois. FAFSA completion in Colorado was 48 percent, while in Illinois it was 59 percent over the same period. 5, 6 While 50 percent of high school seniors applied for Cal Grants, only 25 percent received awards. About two-thirds of these 100,000 students accessed Cal Grant B awards, which provide approximately $1,500 for books and living expenses #+1&3.)2-$),1/2)($!1)05)"0''$.$7)D<0+2)03$62-&1#)05)/2+#$32/) received Cal Grant A awards, which provide for full systemwide fees at a California State University or University of California campus, or tuition support at another California college. 7 These awards can provide up to approximately $12,000. Of the 50 percent of students who did not apply for Cal Grant aid, tens of thousands would probably have met the academic!3#),3!3"&!')$'&.&<'()"1&2$1&!7)e-$/$)/2+#$32/)'$52)=02$32&!''() hundreds of millions of dollars in Cal Grant aid untapped. SCHOOL VARIATIONS We wondered how application rates varied by high school, and whether students from higher need schools were more 01)'$//)'&;$'()20)!=='()501),3!3"&!')!&#7)U3)03$)-!3#4)2-$/$) schools might post lower completion rates, as low-income students are historically underrepresented at the postsecondary level and don t have as many college-going supports in place. On the other hand, these schools serve the students 9-0)"0+'#)<$3$,2)2-$)%0/2)510%),3!3"&!')!&#7 809$:$14)9-$3)9$)'00;$#)!2)LDLBD)"0%='$2&03)<()/"-00') poverty level, we found no difference between completion rates in the highest and lowest poverty schools. 8 This suggests that many students across the state are not accessing all of the aid that is available to them. Completion rates were also similar for Cal Grants, with the exception of the lowest =0:$12()P%01$)!5V+$32Q)/"-00'/4)9-$1$)"0%='$2&03)1!2$/)9$1$) slightly lower. (See Figure 1.) THE EDUCATION TRUST WEST THE COST OF OPPORTUNITY FEBRUARY 2013 2

FIGURE 1: FAFSA and Cal Grant completion rates by high school poverty level (percent of students qualifying for free or reduced-price meals) Percent of 12th graders completing application 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% 53% 43% Lowest Poverty High Schools FAFSA Completion Rate 53% 54% 54% Highest Poverty High Schools Cal Grant Completion Rate 50% All High Schools SOME HIGH SCHOOLS ENSURE BROAD ACCESS TO FINANCIAL AID Despite enormous variation in FAFSA and Cal Grant completion rates across high schools, a diverse range of schools are doing exceptionally well in supporting all students to complete 2-$)"0''$.$),3!3"&!')!&#)!=='&"!2&03)=10"$//4)!""01#&3.)20) our analysis. The 100 high schools with the highest FAFSA completion rates in our sample are evenly split in terms of poverty level, with about half above the state average poverty level and half below. (See Table 1 for a full list of these schools.) 8&.-)/"-00'/)&3)2-$)20=)1!3;/)501)LDLBD)"0%='$2&03)!'/0) vary when it comes to their achievement levels. A total of 49 schools in this top 100 scored in the top 30 percent, while 18 of them were in the lowest 30 percent on the Academic Performance Index (API), a statewide measure of school performance. These schools may be serving as pipelines to local community colleges or other colleges with open enrollment policies. Many of our top 100 (schools with the highest state FAFSA and Cal Grant completion rates) are small schools or charter schools. More than half have fewer than 150 seniors, and 40 =$1"$32)!1$)"-!12$1)/"-00'/7)809$:$14)2-$1$)!1$)!'/0)%!3() large, traditional high schools that perform well. Traditional schools with more than 500 seniors represent 16 percent of our top 100. About one-third of our top 100 schools offer educational options, such as a magnet program, smaller learning communities, or thematic schools. E-$/$),3#&3./)!1$)&%=012!32)&3)2-!2)2-$()#$%03/21!2$) that all students from a range of high schools whether -&.-)=0:$12()01)%01$)!5V+$324)'09)01)-&.-6!"-&$:&3.4)/%!'') or large, traditional or offering educational options can!3#)/-0+'#)<$)/+==012$#)20)!=='()501),3!3"&!')!&#)20)03$)05) California s nearly 500 degree-granting colleges or other U.S. postsecondary options. LEARNING FROM SUCCESSFUL HIGH SCHOOLS We learned from the high schools where applying for aid is prevalent what practices they employed to boost their students FAFSA and Cal Grant completion rates. They ranged 510%)=10:&#&3.),3!3"&!')!&#)$#+"!2&03)!/)=!12)05)%!3#!201() courses, to more traditional individual counseling strategies. D'2-0+.-)!==10!"-$/):!1&$#4)%!3()/"-00'/)&#$32&,$#)!)/-!1$#) set of important practices. These include: Managing data W) )I&1$"2'()/+<%&22&3.)M!')N1!32)NXD)!3#).1!#+!2&03) :$1&,"!2&03/)20)MBDM)501)!'')/2+#$32/4)2-$3)50''09&3.)+=) with the ones who did not have valid information. Providing supports W) 80/2&3.)M!/-)501)M0''$.$)901;/-0=/)!3#)!'2$13!2&:$) workshops for students who are unable to attend. (See Federal and State Efforts to Increase Access to Financial Aid sidebar for more about Cash for College.) W) )U55$1&3.)'!3.+!.$)21!3/'!2&03)20)5!%&'&$/)!2)M!/-)501) M0''$.$)901;/-0=/)!3#)02-$1),3!3"&!')!&#)$:$32/7 Reaching out to students and parents W) )M0+3/$'01):&/&2/)20)/$3&01)"'!//100%/)20)1!&/$)!9!1$3$//) and inform students of the importance of FAFSA completion and availability of supports. W) )M032!"2&3.)=!1$32/):&!)$6%!&')!3#)=-03$)20)1$%&3#) them about the important steps required to complete the FAFSA. While students, parents, and high school administrators!1$)%0/2)#&1$"2'()1$/=03/&<'$)501)!=='(&3.)501),3!3"&!')!&#4) districts can do more to increase application rates. Some districts already implement strategies that help a broad base of students complete the application process. For example, Y0/)D3.$'$/)H3&,$#)!3#)02-$1)/"-00')#&/21&"2/)=10:&#$)MBDM) 9&2-)NXD):$1&,"!2&03/)501)!'')2-$&1)/$3&01/4)$'&%&3!2&3.)!3) important potential barrier to Cal Grant aid for thousands of students. Thirteen California districts have also taken part in an ongoing pilot program with the U.S. Department of Education to provide information on whether their students have completed a FAFSA. 9 The combined FAFSA completion rate for these districts exceeds the rate for other districts by 6 percentage points, and the Cal Grant completion rate is 10 points higher. (See Figure 2.) Many federal and state agencies are doing their part as well. Both FSA and CSAC have made important strides to increase access to aid for eligible students. (See Efforts to Increase Access for a summary.) 3 THE EDUCATION TRUST WEST THE COST OF OPPORTUNITY FEBRUARY 2013

FIGURE 2: FAFSA and Cal Grant completion rates for districts in FSA pilot program versus other districts Percent of 12th graders completing application 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% 59% Pilot Districts CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS With nearly half a million 12th-graders, California needs to provide its students with access to rigorous college-ready "+11&"+'+%)!3#)&3/21+"2&03)!/)9$'')!/)!""$//)20)/+5,"&$32),3!3"&!')!&#)20)/+==012)!3#)$3"0+1!.$)2-$&1)=0/2/$"03#!1() aspirations. Toward this aim, we recommend that the state: W) )Z10!#$3)"0%%+3&"!2&03)20)#&/21&"2/4)/"-00'/4)/2+#$32/4) and communities about the availability of aid and importance of applying for it. This could be achieved through expanded support of existing programs administered by CSAC, such as Cal-SOAP and Cash for College. W) Encourage schools and districts to submit Cal Grant GPA!3#).1!#+!2&03):$1&,"!2&03/)501)/2+#$32/)&3)<+';4)2-$1$<() streamlining the process for students and eliminating possibilities for errors that may render students ineligible. W) )M-!1.$)MBDM)9&2-)=10:&#&3.)&3#&:&#+!'&[$#)/2+#$326'$:$') data on FAFSA and Cal Grant completion to schools and districts in a manner similar to FSA s pilot program. W) )\$.+'!1'()1$=012)!..1$.!2$#)!=='&"!2&03)1!2$)#!2!)20) high schools and the public. To promote transparency, the Education Trust West has made the data underlying this report available on the Web at!""#$%%&'(')*(+(*,-.,"/01"2.1"-3/4 By focusing on these key efforts, we will ensure that more students access the resources they need to take advantage of life-changing opportunities in higher education. 59% FAFSA Completion Rate 53% Non-Pilot Districts Cal Grant Completion Rate VIEW FAFSA AND CAL GRANTS COMPLETION RATES BY HIGH SCHOOL Visit our website to see application rates by high school and learn more about expanding access to student financial aid in California. 49% FEDERAL AND STATE EFFORTS TO INCREASE ACCESS TO FINANCIAL AID Recently, the U.S. Department of Education s office of Federal Student Aid (FSA) has increased efforts to make aid more accessible by simplifying the FAFSA and extending outreach and information to students and families. FSA is also piloting a program that provides districts with information on which of their students have submitted the FAFSA so that they can support the ones who have yet to complete the application. Importantly, FSA has also begun publishing school-level data on the number of high school students submitting and completing the FAFSA data we drew upon for this report. The California Student Aid Commission (CSAC) has streamlined applying for Cal Grants by developing an online application system (WebGrants) and providing Cash for College workshops across the state to assist lowincome and first-generation college-going students in completing FAFSA and Cal Grant applications. CSAC also administers the California Student Opportunity and Access Program (Cal-SOAP), a statewide network of 15 programs that provides outreach and advising services to their local communities in order to increase access and raise achievement levels of low-income students. NOTES 1. Colleen Moore, Nancy Shulock, Divided We Fail: Improving Completion & Closing Racial Gaps in California s Community Colleges. (Sacramento, CA: IHELP, CSU Sacramento, 2010). Also see The Campaign for College Opportunity: www.collegecampaign.org. 2. Ryan D. Hahn and Derek Price, Ph.D, Promise Lost: College-Qualified Students Who Don t Enroll in College (Washington, D.C.: Institute for Higher Education Policy, 2008), http://www. ihep.org/assets/files/publications/m-r/promiselostcollegequalrpt.pdf. 3. Jenny Nagaoka, Melissa Roderick, and Vanessa Coca, Barriers to College Attainment: Lessons from Chicago (Washington, D.C.: Center for American Progress; Chicago, Ill.: The Consortium on Chicago School Research, December 2008), http://www.americanprogress. org/issues/higher-education/report/2009/01/27/5432/barriers-to-college-attainmentlessons-from-chicago. 4. Eric P. Bettinger, Bridget Terry Long, Philip Oreopoulos, and Lisa Sanbonmatsu, The Role of Simplification and Information in College Decisions: Results from the H&R Block FAFSA Experiment (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009), http://www. nber.org/papers/w15361. 5. Colorado Department of Education, 2011 2012 FAFSA Completion Report, available at: http://highered.colorado.gov/fafsa. 6. Illinois Student Aid Commission, 2011 2012 FAFSA Completions by School, (data includes private schools) available at: http://www.isac.org/home/fafsa 7. Data on Cal Grant awards by program and school segment are not yet available for the 2012 13 year, so these estimates are based on award patterns from the 2010 11 year. See the California Student Aid Commission, Facts at Your Fingertips: High School Entitlement Cal Grant Program 2010 11, http://www.csac.ca.gov/facts/fayf_ hsentitlementprogram_2010_11.pdf. 8. Highest poverty schools are defined as those in the top poverty quartile, based on the percentage of students that qualified for free or reduced-price lunch. Lowest poverty schools are defined as those in the bottom quartile. 9. Districts in the current FSA FAFSA completion pilot are: Elk Grove, Long Beach, San Francisco, Sacramento City, Stockton, Jurupa, and Alvord Unified School Districts, and El Monte, Shasta, Sequoia, and Whittier Union High School Districts. Fresno and Riverside Unified School Districts began in the initial pilot cohort in the 2011 12 school year. http://financialaid.edtrustwest.org THE EDUCATION TRUST WEST THE COST OF OPPORTUNITY FEBRUARY 2013 4

TABLE 1: TOP 100 SCHOOLS WITH HIGHEST FAFSA COMPLETION RATES STATEWIDE (SORTED ALPHABETICALLY) School District 12th Grade Enrollment Free or Reduced Price Meals FAFSA Completion Rate Cal Grants Completion Rate Academia Avance Charter Los Angeles County Office of Education 28 88% 79% 79% Alameda Community Learning Center Alameda City Unified 37 -- 70% 51% Alhambra High Alhambra Unified 736 72% 71% 68% Alliance College-Ready Academy High No. 5 Los Angeles Unified 162 1% 72% 53% Alliance Gertz-Ressler High Los Angeles Unified 123 90% 77% 85% Alliance William and Carol Ouchi Academy High Los Angeles Unified 102 96% 70% 80% American Indian Public High Oakland Unified 21 85% 81% 95% Anderson W. Clark Magnet High Glendale Unified 254 46% 73% 85% Animo Leadership High Lennox 136 99% 81% 79% Animo Locke Technology High Los Angeles Unified 124 92% 82% 85% Animo South Los Angeles Charter Los Angeles Unified 126 93% 71% 68% Arleta High Los Angeles Unified 361 90% 71% 80% Aspire California College Preparatory Academy Alameda County Office of Education 44 48% 75% -- Bell Senior High Los Angeles Unified 793 86% 70% 70% Benjamin Franklin Senior High Los Angeles Unified 293 69% 78% 86% Big Pine High Big Pine Unified 17 70% 71% 59% Big Valley Jr. Sr. High Big Valley Joint Unified 17 65% 71% 82% Bright Star Secondary Charter Academy Los Angeles Unified 16 83% 75% 113% CA Academy for Liberal Studies Early College High Los Angeles Unified 63 7% 87% 102% California Academy of Mathematics and Science Long Beach Unified 152 49% 78% 86% Carson Senior High Los Angeles Unified 527 52% 73% 67% Chula Vista Senior High Sweetwater Union High 574 63% 74% 75% CIVITAS School of Leadership Los Angeles Unified 54 87% 70% 91% Coleville High Eastern Sierra Unified 20 38% 80% 65% Community Charter Early College High Los Angeles Unified 101 63% 73% 79% Delhi High Delhi Unified 150 88% 69% 69% Dunsmuir High Dunsmuir Joint Union High 16 68% 88% 94% Edison High Fresno Unified 481 72% 75% 83% Erma Duncan Polytechnical High Fresno Unified 214 89% 74% 86% Etna Union High Scott Valley Unified 38 63% 79% 79% Fairfax Senior High Los Angeles Unified 457 68% 74% 84% Firebaugh High Firebaugh-Las Deltas Joint Unified 157 93% 88% 93% Franklin High Elk Grove Unified 642 32% 69% 74% Gabrielino High San Gabriel Unified 427 52% 75% 73% Global College Prep Charter High Center Joint Unified 14 63% 79% 79% Gretchen Whitney High ABC Unified 171 17% 89% 91% Harbor Teacher Preparation Academy Los Angeles Unified 94 65% 79% 81% Harmony Magnet Academy Porterville Unified 108 54% 81% 88% Hawthorne Math and Science Academy Hawthorne 140 82% 74% 76% Health Sciences High San Diego Unified 103 72% 76% 55% Hemet Academy for Applied Academics and Technology Hemet Unified 26 73% 135% 96% High Tech High San Diego Unified 126 30% 76% 79% High Tech High Chula Vista SBC - High Tech High 131 40% 73% 72% High Tech High International San Diego Unified 93 35% 74% 84% High Tech High Media Arts San Diego Unified 96 38% 77% 83% High Tech LA Los Angeles Unified 84 50% 71% 86% Imperial High Imperial Unified 188 36% 72% 81% International Polytechnic High Los Angeles County Office of Education 106 37% 78% 76% John F. Kennedy High Los Angeles Unified 522 59% 70% 75% KIPP King Collegiate High San Lorenzo Unified 87 66% 80% 90% 5 THE EDUCATION TRUST WEST THE COST OF OPPORTUNITY FEBRUARY 2013

School District 12th Grade Enrollment Free or Reduced Price Meals FAFSA Completion Rate Cal Grants Completion Rate KIPP San Jose Collegiate East Side Union High 57 66% 81% 84% La Quinta High Garden Grove Unified 523 66% 75% 83% Lennox Mathematics, Science and Technology Academy Lennox 122 82% 74% 79% Life Learning Academy Charter San Francisco Unified 16 40% 81% 88% Los Angeles High School of the Arts (LAHSA) Los Angeles Unified 79 91% 92% 51% Los Angeles Leadership Academy Los Angeles Unified 50 97% 74% 80% Lowell High San Francisco Unified 648 40% 80% 72% Lynbrook High Fremont Union High 423 4% 70% 58% Mar Vista Senior High Sweetwater Union High 384 63% 69% 68% Mark Keppel High Alhambra Unified 573 61% 70% 63% Marshall Fundamental Pasadena Unified 236 69% 72% 66% Marysville Charter Academy for the Arts Marysville Joint Unified 39 38% 77% 87% Maywood Academy High Los Angeles Unified 223 1% 72% 79% Metropolitan Arts & Technology High San Francisco Unified 15 18% 80% 80% Middle College High Lodi Unified 56 47% 77% 84% Middle College High West Contra Costa Unified 64 49% 89% 80% Middle College High Los Angeles Unified 102 72% 79% 85% Miguel Contreras Learning Complex Los Angeles Unified 161 84% 73% 73% Mira Mesa High San Diego Unified 581 53% 71% 72% Monterey Trail High Elk Grove Unified 508 62% 70% 73% Montgomery Senior High Sweetwater Union High 374 69% 72% 69% Moreno Valley Community Learning Center Moreno Valley Unified 10 43% 90% -- Natomas Pacific Pathways Prep Natomas Unified 85 39% 74% 79% New Village Charter High Los Angeles Unified 23 3% 70% 87% Northridge Academy High Los Angeles Unified 188 67% 85% 82% Nuview Bridge Early College High Nuview Union 84 56% 75% 88% Oakland Military Institute, College Preparatory Academy Oakland Unified 51 79% 71% 86% Oakland School for the Arts Oakland Unified 74 20% 73% 85% Oxford Academy Anaheim Union High 173 28% 80% 69% Pacific Collegiate Charter Santa Cruz County Office of Education 77 5% 75% 75% Phineas Banning Senior High Los Angeles Unified 508 70% 69% 75% Pioneer High Whittier Union High 335 79% 70% 69% Preuss School UCSD San Diego Unified 93 100% 83% 86% Sacramento Charter High Sacramento City Unified 178 68% 70% 76% San Diego International Studies San Diego Unified 122 54% 72% 82% San Gabriel High Alhambra Unified 558 83% 77% 79% Santa Paula High Santa Paula Union High 292 74% 73% 70% Segerstrom High Santa Ana Unified 529 71% 70% 75% Southern Trinity High Southern Trinity Joint Unified 12 97% 75% 58% Temple City High Temple City Unified 491 38% 72% 81% Tulelake High Tulelake Basin Joint Unified 33 81% 73% 94% University High Fresno Unified 109 4% 73% 79% University Preparatory Victor Valley Union High 151 19% 89% 90% University Preparatory Shasta Union High 75 26% 77% 81% View Park Preparatory Accelerated High Los Angeles Unified 97 47% 75% 91% Wallenberg (Raoul) Traditional High San Francisco Unified 127 62% 72% 82% Walnut High Walnut Valley Unified 737 13% 72% 44% Washington (George) High San Francisco Unified 658 56% 71% 73% WESM Health/Sports Medicine Los Angeles Unified 272 50% 72% 75% West Campus Sacramento City Unified 195 46% 73% 71% THE EDUCATION TRUST WEST THE COST OF OPPORTUNITY FEBRUARY 2013 6

METHODS For this report, we combined several data sets: FAFSA completion data for California schools as of Dec. 23, 2012 for the financial aid/academic year 2012 13, downloaded from the U.S. Department of Education s office of Federal Student Aid (FSA) website. Cal Grant application and award counts by school from its grant delivery database. 2011 12 California public schools enrollment data, downloaded from the California Department of Education (CDE) website in December 2012. We limited our analysis to public California high schools (CDE school ownership code = 66), accounting for 90 percent of California high schools and 97 percent of its 12th-graders. We excluded most continuation and alternative schools. Similarly, we excluded a number of single-school districts and K 12 schools, many of which are charter schools. We calculated FAFSA and Cal Grant completion and award rates by dividing the counts for FAFSA completion, Cal Grant applications, and Cal Grant awards by the 12th grade enrollment counts. Any schools missing either enrollment counts or financial aid data were excluded from the analysis. In some cases we calculated rates of greater than 100 percent. This was likely due to inclusion in the numerator of students who were not current graduates; for example, graduates from a prior year, students who misidentified their school of enrollment, or 11th grade or earlier students who applied for financial aid. Additionally, we merged this data with Academic Performance Index (2011 Growth API) and free and reduced-price meal eligibility data for 2010 11 (the most recent year available), both downloaded from the CDE website. Throughout our analysis we defined highest poverty schools as those in the top quartile of the state for percent of students eligible for free or reduced-price meals and lowest poverty schools as those in the bottom quartile. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN FAFSA AND CAL GRANT DATA FSA and CSAC use different methods for identifying which students should count as part of a school s 12th grade cohort for a given year, with FSA generally identifying fewer students as part of that cohort than CSAC. FSA attempts to restrict the reported FAFSA completion counts to high school seniors by including only students 18 years of age and under, calculated using students date of birth. For this reason the FAFSA data may not represent an exact count. The CSAC data does not draw upon student date of birth, but instead uses verified student GPA data provided by the high school, including graduation month and year. CSAC data includes early graduates (as of December in their senior year) and students completing graduation through the summer (August 31) of their senior year. Not all students who complete a FAFSA also complete a Cal Grant application because they may not complete the GPA and graduation verification steps required by CSAC. This would generally mean that FAFSA completion rates for a given high school should be higher than Cal Grant completion rates. However, because of the differences in the way CSAC and FSA count 12th graders, this may not always be the case. The Education Trust West works for the high academic achievement of all students at all levels, pre-k through college. We expose opportunity and achievement gaps that separate students of color and low-income students from other youth, and we identify and advocate for the strategies that will forever close those gaps. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Funding for this research was generously provided by the College 1814 Franklin St., Suite 220, Oakland, Calif. 94612 Access Foundation of California. 7 THE EDUCATION TRUST WEST THE COST OF OPPORTUNITY www.edtrustwest.org FEBRUARY 2013