The HEA Group is a research and consulting agency focused on college access, value, and economic mobility.

College is one of the biggest investments of a student’s lifetime.

With our expertise in high-impact research, policy, and government advocacy,

the HEA Group helps ensure that investment pays off for more students.

Our Impact

Our research and expertise has been featured in national newspapers, including the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, USA Today, Politico, NPR, and NBC.

  • Seeing whether a college’s former students are earning “reasonable” incomes, said Michael Itzkowitz, HEA Group’s founder and president, can help people weigh whether they want to cross some institutions off their list. Someone deciding between similar colleges, for example, can see the institution that has produced students with significantly higher incomes. While income isn’t necessarily the only criteria to consider when comparing schools, Mr. Itzkowitz said, “it’s a very good starting point.”

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  • About 260,000 graduates who received federal financial aid were examined in the report, which was commissioned by the nonprofit, Oakland-based College Futures Foundation and conducted by the HEA Group, a research and consulting firm focused on college access, value and economic mobility, using federal and institutional data.

    “We know that attending college can be one of the largest investments that anyone makes beyond getting a mortgage,” said Michael Itzkowitz, the HEA Group’s president, who wrote the report. “So it’s critical that we have all of the data in front of us to ensure that we’re making the most informed choice possible.”...“It’s critical that students not only investigate the institution that they’re applying to, but also the field of study that they’re looking to consider,” Itzkowitz said.

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  • Mr. Itzkowitz is adamant that certain schools do have some explaining to do. “There are some institutions that are in the business of enrolling a high proportion of low-income students,” he said, “and ultimately leave them worse off than if they hadn’t attended college in the first place.”

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  • Bachelor’s degree programs, which typically take four years, are generally more expensive but are most likely to show at least some return on investment — meaning graduates earn enough to pay off their college costs reasonably quickly — for those who complete a degree, compared with two-year associate degrees or shorter certificate programs. That’s good news for students who completed those four-year programs, said the report’s author, Michael Itzkowitz…

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  • There are other advantages to a higher education than financial, Itzkowitz noted. “But people should at least go into it with an understanding of how much they’re paying for that credential and whether it’s likely to pay off, in the short term or the long term.”

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  • In new research, Itzkowitz highlights 10 schools that are true engines of economic mobility: They enroll the highest proportion of students from low- and moderate-income backgrounds and "provide them with a strong return on their educational investment."

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  • This week’s episode of The Key, the last in a three-part series on value in higher education, examines the data and metrics we’re using now – and those we might use going forward – to gauge the value colleges and universities are providing to their students and other constituents. The conversations include Michael Itzkowitz…

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  • Michael Itzkowitz is the guru of College Scorecard. While working for the Department of Education, he noticed that some institutions were providing degrees to their students, but weren’t leaving them with well-paying jobs or the ability to pay down their loans. In this episode, Dr. Jason Altmire talks with Michael about how his work now focuses on return-on-investment (ROI) and putting out information that helps ensure students get the best bang-for-their-buck.

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