College Track: 2020 Social Mobility Report 2020 Social Mobility Report | Page 26
Endnotes
(1) First Destinations for the College Class of
2017, NACE (2018).
(2) Some graduates are both employed
full-time and in graduate school for a total
graduate school enrollment of 13%. (8) Status and Trends in the Education of
Racial and Ethnic Groups 2018, NCES (2019).
(9) Mismatch: How Many Workers With a
Bachelor’s Degree Are Overqualified for their
Job?, Urban Institute (2017).
(3) Employment percentages are rounded to
the closest whole number, and may not total
100% when added. (10) Research, Statistics & Policy Analysis,
Education and Lifetime Earnings, Social
Security Administration (2015).
(4) For 2019, we were able to get updated
data on nine of the 12 students either via
Survey Monkey or Linkedin.
(5) Who Goes to Graduate School and Who
Succeeds?, Urban Institute (2017).
(6) We use the federal gainful employment
rule for colleges, that loan repayment should
not exceed 8% of income, to get a general
understanding of our graduates ability to
repay loans. (11) Who Does Work Work For, ACT Center
for Equity and Learning (2017), Mentoring
College Students to Success. Strada-Gallup
(2018), 2017 College Student Survey, Strada-
Gallup (2017).
(12) College Track Social Mobility Report
Memo, October 2019, Rebecca Gleit,
Stanford University PhD candidate.
(7) Student Debt and the Class of 2018,
TICAS (2019).
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