Study says nearly half of college grads stay in Mountain State

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — A study from West Virginia University says college graduates in the Mountain State who received a Promise Scholarship are more likely to stay and work in West Virginia.

The WVU College of Business and Economics did the study for the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission. Researchers took at look at the college graduates from the past 10 years.

(Read WVU study here)

The study estimates 48 percent of the graduates work here and those who received a Promise Scholarship are more likely to work in their home state.

“Human capital development is crucial to long-run economic prosperity for West Virginia, and as such it is vital to understand how our college and university graduates fare in the labor market,” Dr. John Deskins, Director of the WVU Bureau of Business and Economic Research (BBER) and co-author of the study said in a news release. “This research will be important in designing better public policies surrounding higher education in the future.”

Deskins said another finding showed Promise recipients “exhibit significantly higher work participation rates in West Virginia compared to overall baccalaureate graduates.”

The Promise Scholarship is a merit-based scholarship program.

The study said that more than half of the graduates from the past 10 years that work in the state do so in just two industries: health care and social assistance, and education services.

 





More News

News
"I never gave up hope we'd find her and bring her home."
Father of missing 10 year old talks about his range of emotions at the discovery of his daughter's remains nearly 24 years after she went missing
April 23, 2024 - 3:45 pm
News
Killer gave investigators a death bed confession in death of woman and her young daughter
Larry Webb told investigators he shot and killed Susan Carter and her 10-year old daughter Alex in 2000, then buried their bodies behind his Beckley home. Nearing death, he decided it was time to get it off his chest.
April 23, 2024 - 2:56 pm
News
Attorney General plans 'a major update' about federal case involving transgender athlete
The majority on a three-judge panel with the Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled against the State of West Virginia's position last week on how state law would affect the eligibility of middle school athlete Becky Pepper-Jackson.
April 23, 2024 - 2:24 pm
News
Cleveland-Cliffs CEO hinting of possible new use for idled Weirton plant
Union leader confirms discussions are underway to turn plant into operation that makes steel for electric grid transformers.
April 23, 2024 - 1:21 pm


Your Comments