Contributed by: PARTNERSHIP FOR LOS ANGELES SCHOOLS
Every year, between 10 and 40 percent of high school graduates who intend to enroll in college do not go on to enroll in the fall – a phenomenon known as summer melt. Strategies to counteract summer melt include building a cohort of college-going students, extending counseling services into the summer, leveraging near-peer advisors to guide and mentor graduates, and utilizing technology to nudge students to complete the necessary enrollment steps.
Programs aimed at freezing summer melt help students build community, learn about the social emotional skills they will need to be successful in college, connect with important offices at their destination college, and complete enrollment tasks including financial aid verification, housing applications, placement tests, and course registration. By extending support into the summer, districts can ensure more graduates successfully enroll in postsecondary education.
How does the strategy create more equitable access and opportunities?
Students from low-income backgrounds, first-generation college students, and students of color are the most impacted by summer melt. Additionally, the pandemic impacted many students’ postsecondary plans, further exacerbating inequalities in who is able to successfully transition to college.
Students generally melt during the summer because a problem arises and they don’t know who might be available to assist them or how to reach out for help. Providing students with summer advising can help connect them to the resources and offices that will continue to support them through the transition and beyond. It gives students who normally are most likely to melt the skills and supports to make it to college and be better prepared once they arrive.
Studies have shown that summer melt strategies are particularly effective for students from low-income backgrounds. A randomized control trial of summer counseling programs found that postsecondary enrollment increased 3.3 percentage points overall, and up to 12 percentage points for students from low-income backgrounds.