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  • Home
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Clearinghouse Reviewers
  • Crisis Resources
  • National Resources
    • National Organizations
    • Federal Agencies
    • Campus Student Groups
  • Publications & Products
    • NCCSD Posters & Products
    • Research Briefs
    • Research Highlights
    • AHEAD Publications

Student Food Insecurity and Homelessness Resources

Many people are surprised to learn that hunger, food insecurity, and homelessness are on the rise among college students across the country. These students are often called "disconnected" or "highly mobile" students, but most of them can be "connected" students with good supports and resources.  Sometimes agencies think that if students are able to afford college, they must have enough money for food and shelter, but that is not always true. Family, medical, tuition, technology or other costs can cut into many students' budgets for food, or ability to find or maintain campus or off-campus housing.

We've started this page to help you find resources in your community. 

​Also consider checking out Addressing Homelessness and Housing Insecurity in Higher Education by Ronald E Hallett, Rashida M. Crutchfield, and Jennifer J. Maguire - the book includes sections on trauma in higher education.

young woman carrying a full bag of groceries
Find a Food Pantry near you. Some pantries are skeptical about serving college students, but they will help you if you persist and explain your needs.

Swipe Out Hunger is a network of students and college administrators seeking to address student hunger together.

Many college students are potentially eligible for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). There are additional programs for disabled individuals as well.


Food

Check with Financial Aid to see if they have any unused aid left for the term or year. Sometimes students drop out and leave aid behind. 

Disabled students should seek additional aid for unmet medical or disability-related expenses.

​See the NCCSD page on Paying for College for additional financial aid ideas.

Visit your school's Chaplains or Spiritual Life Center to see if they offer events that include meals or food distribution. Catholic Newman Centers and Hillel (Jewish org) sometimes offer meal events; you don't have to attend their services to join their meals. Check out student organizations that have social, community or religious events that offer meals.
four small house-shaped plaques spelling out HOME
Tips and strategies from College Guide for Homeless Students (note that this is hosted by a commercial site; you do not need to sign up to read the information)

National Homeless Shelter Directory - find temporary or permanent housing and services.

Health Care Services Directory from the National Health Care for the Homeless Council

​Florida program for college students needing housing - The Southern Scholarship Foundation

Housing

​There are two types of  college students who face housing insecurity:
those who entered school while homeless and those who became homeless while already in attendance.

Experiencing youth homelessness before entering college means students are more likely to be comfortable accessing aid from social services, but probably unfamiliar with how to find and navigate the resources available through the school itself.

It's important for students with housing insecurity to learn more about the options available to them, such as financial aid and health care services.


Hunger and Homelessness in the News


​Housing and Food Insecurity Affects College Students
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2020/02/20/housing-food-insecurity-affecting-many-college-students-new-data-says/#comments-wrapper
​
Learning from the #RealCollege Movement
https://www.forbes.com/sites/civicnation/2019/11/07/learning-from-the-realcollege-movement/#1e5abaee6a55

Conference on College Students and Poverty
https://www.edsurge.com/news/2019-10-01-conference-looks-for-ways-to-help-college-students-facing-hunger-and-poverty

Faculty-Led Funds for Students
​https://www.edsurge.com/news/2019-09-05-a-faculty-led-fund-gets-cash-to-struggling-students-fast
​

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​In 2021, a federal discretionary grant (P116D210002) was awarded via  the National Center for Information and Technical Support for Postsecondary Students with Disabilities Program (NCITSPSD) to the University of Minnesota’s Institute on Community Integration (ICI-UMN), in full partnership with the Association on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD) and is authorized by Congress in the Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 (777.4). 

The NCITSPSD program grant was originally awarded in 2015 (P116D150005) to the Association on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD).

Please see caveats on the home page about not assuming the NCCSD, University of Minnesota, AHEAD or the US Dept. of Education agree with all content on linked pages, and we can't guarantee the accessibility of other sites.

The material on this website is available in alternative formats upon request; questions or concerns about accessibility should be sent to nccsd@ahead.org.  All images are from Bigstock.com or public domain except where noted.

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