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Stretching Every Dollar: The Impact of Personal Financial Stress on the Enrollment Behaviors of Working and Nonworking Community College Students
Authors:Moumita Mukherjee  Linda Serra Hagedorn  Agustina Purnamasari  Franco Santiago Martinez
Institution:1. Department of Psychological, Health and Learning Sciences, College of Education, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, USAmmukherj@central.uh.edu;3. School of Education, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, USA;4. Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies, College of Education, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, USA
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Using 1,400 survey responses collected from two large urban community college systems in Texas, this study examined how students’ financial habits, stress, and well-being influenced their enrollment behaviors. Working students, compared to their nonworking peers, reported significantly lower levels of overall financial well-being. After controlling for other relevant predictors of persistence, regression results showed that students with lower financial well-being and higher financial stress were more likely to doubt their ability to complete college. Results for the restricted sample of working students revealed a strong relationship between a student’s financial well-being and stress. These students also reported having to reduce their semester course load and/or stopping out for a semester in order to work more hours to pay for expenses. These findings suggest that initiatives aimed at helping students improve their financial literacy and money management skills may be an effective, yet underutilized, way to improve retention rates at community colleges.
Keywords:
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