Lexington Books
Pages: 214
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-4985-8843-0 • Hardback • October 2020 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4985-8844-7 • eBook • October 2020 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Thomas Adam is associate professor and associate director of the International and Global Studies Program at the University of Arkansas.
Part I: College Education as a Public Good
Chapter One: Tuition, Tuition Waivers, and Living Expenses
Chapter Two: Scholarship Endowments: Memorializing Donors, and Shaping Student Bodies
Chapter Three: State, City, and Church Scholarship Programs: From Training Teachers and Ministers to the Shaping of the States’ Economies
Part II: College Education as a Personal Pursuit
Chapter Four: Making Rich College Students Pay Tuition
Chapter Five: Expanding Scholarship Support for Students in Need
Chapter Six: Student Loan Funds: From Marginal Funding Tool to Mainstream Acceptance
Thomas Adam has provided an invaluable historical perspective on the role of college education in the United States. At a time when ‘college for all’ has become a little-understood mantra in electoral politics, Adam shows how American attitudes toward undergraduate education have changed radically. Over the course of the last two centuries, Americans moved from understanding college as a public good, a preparation for public service, to seeing college as a personal interest, an investment in the student’s future career. The question that now arises is: what will justify universal college education in the twenty-first century? This is an important book.
— Stanley N. Katz, Princeton University
This book is a well-researched, comprehensive overview of how U.S. college tuition was funded from the beginning of the country through WW II and the G.I. Bill. The book offers insights into how college student support might be structured. It will be of interest to historians, educators, and policy makers.
— Sam Stern, Oregon State University
In this interesting and informative study, Thomas Adam argues persuasively that the 1920s and 1930s marked related shifts in undergraduate demography, tuition charges, and financial aid policies that profoundly shape American higher education today.
— Bruce A. Kimball, Ohio State University