U.C.L.A.'s Students 4 Students, has sheltered eight
long-term students since opening in October. (NYT photo)
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Sara Goldrick-Rab, founder of the HOPE Lab and a professor of higher education policy at Temple University, said one the main reasons for student homelessness is an increase in low-income students that lack a safety net if they run into financial problems, Harris writes. If they lose their job, or get kicked out by roommates, they might lack the funds to find another place to live, while at the same time, their parents are unable to afford to help them out financially.
Other reasons are an aging student population—the average age for community college students is 29—and a lack of high paying jobs for people without college degrees, Harris writes. The HOPE study found that only 11 percent of homeless students made more than $15 an hour.
Eloy Ortiz Oakley, chancellor of the California Community Colleges, told Harris, “This is not just happening in urban poor communities. It affects kids from working-class families across the state, in rural communities and in communities of color. Homelessness now affects working-class and formerly middle-class families.”
from The Rural Blog http://ift.tt/2pa7JfY Growing number of community college students, even in rural areas, are homeless - Entrepreneur Generations
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