Report Estimates Half Of Vets On GI Bill Graduate

Career College Central summary:

  • A little more than half of the veterans who got college money under the GI Bill since 2009 eventually graduated, though many took longer to do it, a new study estimates. The report released Monday estimated that 51.7 percent of student veterans earned a degree or certificate for some kind of higher education. That's slightly lower than the graduation rate for traditional students, who generally enroll out of high school, but higher than for veterans' non-traditional peers — those students who also tend to be older and have families and jobs.
  • The study was done by the Student Veterans of America, an advocacy group, with help from the Veterans Affairs Department and the National Student Clearinghouse. Experts on veteran issues say it's the most comprehensive study to date on a sparsely researched subject — how vets are performing under a GI Bill program that has spent nearly $35 billion since 2009.
  • The Post-9/11 GI Bill went into effect in 2009 for America's newest generation of veterans. It provides the most generous educational benefits since the original bill went into effect in 1944 for World War II troops. The benefit can be used by a veteran or a member of the immediate family — and more than a million people have used it so far. VA pays all tuition and fees for an in-state student at a public university, $1,000 annually for books and supplies, and a housing allowance generally the same as an army sergeant with dependents would get from the Defense Department. This school year the average monthly payment was $1,430.
  • The SVA, a nonprofit coalition of 985 student vet organizations on college and university campuses globally, entered into an agreement with the VA to create a database, which consisted of 1 million records from veteran beneficiaries who enrolled for education benefits between 2002 and 2013. Analysis of the records showed that the majority of student veterans over those years finished a bachelor's degree within four to six years and an associate degree within four, the SVA said. The group described the graduation rates as strong considering the extra challenges many student veterans face, such as having a service-related disability.

Click through for full article content.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Leave a Reply

Be the First to Comment!

Notify of
avatar