Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 1 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 1 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 4 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 14 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Tienda, Marta | 3 |
Barone, Sandra | 2 |
Alon, Sigal | 1 |
Casada, Jane | 1 |
Cortes, Kalena | 1 |
Daugherty, Lindsay | 1 |
Denning, Jeffrey T. | 1 |
Fletcher, Jason | 1 |
Garcia, Marco A. | 1 |
Healy, Patrick | 1 |
Hoover, Eric | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Reports - Research | 11 |
Journal Articles | 10 |
Reports - Descriptive | 3 |
Dissertations/Theses -… | 2 |
Numerical/Quantitative Data | 1 |
Reports - Evaluative | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Location
Texas | 17 |
California | 1 |
District of Columbia | 1 |
Indiana | 1 |
Michigan | 1 |
North Carolina | 1 |
Virginia | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Family Education Loan Program | 2 |
Elementary and Secondary… | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
State of Texas Assessments of… | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Roxy D. Glass – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This study was designed to investigate whether teacher literacy content knowledge affects student achievement in Texas schools. Teacher participants from Texas public schools completed a three-part survey. In Parts 1 and 2, teachers completed a demographic section and teacher knowledge of foundational reading skills. The survey consisted of…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Legislation, Pedagogical Content Knowledge
Denning, Jeffrey T.; Murphy, Richard; Weinhardt, Felix – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2020
This paper considers an unavoidable feature of the school environment, class rank. What are the long run effects of a student's ordinal rank in elementary school? Using administrative data from all public school students in Texas, we show that students with a higher third grade academic rank, conditional on achievement and classroom fixed effects,…
Descriptors: Class Rank, Elementary School Students, Public Schools, Academic Achievement
Sandra E. Black; Jeffrey T. Denning; Jesse Rothstein – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2020
Selective college admissions are fundamentally a question of tradeoffs: Given capacity, admitting one student means rejecting another. Research to date has generally estimated average effects of college selectivity, and has been unable to distinguish between the effects on students gaining access and on those losing access under alternative…
Descriptors: Selective Admission, Selection Criteria, Admission Criteria, College Admission
Klopfenstein, Kristin; Lively, Kit – Education Finance and Policy, 2016
When calculating class rank, high schools often give additional weight to grades earned in College Board Advanced Placement (AP) courses as an incentive for students to take hard courses. This paper examines changes in student course-taking behavior after an increase in AP grade weights at Texas high schools. We find that raising the magnitude of…
Descriptors: High School Students, Class Rank, Advanced Placement, Grades (Scholastic)
Hoover, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Among the traditional measures of student quality, class rank is widely described by admissions officers as the fuzziest. That is why some colleges no longer use it in their evaluations of applicants, while many others do not consider it very important. The measure once had greater appeal. For one thing, it had the whiff of fairness. Seeing how an…
Descriptors: Class Rank, Computation, High School Graduates, College Freshmen
Fletcher, Jason; Mayer, Adalbert – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2013
The Texas 10% law states that students who graduated among the top 10% of their high school class are guaranteed admission to public universities in Texas. We estimate the causal effects of this admissions guarantee on a sequence of connected decisions: students' application behavior, admission decisions by the university, students' enrollment…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Private Colleges, Universities, College Admission
Daugherty, Lindsay; Martorell, Paco; McFarlin, Isaac, Jr. – Education Next, 2014
The Texas Ten Percent Plan (TTP) provides students in the top 10 percent of their high-school class with automatic admission to any public university in the state, including the two flagship schools, the University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M. Texas created the policy in 1997 after a federal appellate court ruled that the state's previous…
Descriptors: High School Graduates, College Admission, Enrollment Rate, Enrollment Management
Uribe, Patricia E.; Garcia, Marco A. – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2012
This case exemplifies the unintended divisive cause and effect dynamic that can occur as a direct result of a seemingly innocuous school board policy modification. A change in school board policy at a local school district in Laredo, Texas, was designed to facilitate the fulfillment of a foreign language requirement for high school students. A…
Descriptors: Class Rank, Grade Point Average, Boards of Education, Board of Education Policy
Rowett, Charles – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Texas' 2006 House Bill 1, which required all high schools in Texas to provide students with the opportunity to earn a minimum of 12 hours of college credit prior to their graduation beginning the fall of 2008, changed the high school experience. The goal of the bill was to smooth the transition from high school to higher education. By looking at…
Descriptors: College Preparation, Dual Enrollment, College Credits, High School Students
Niu, Sunny X.; Tienda, Marta – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2010
The University of Texas at Austin administrative data between 1990 and 2003 are used to evaluate claims that students granted automatic admission based on top 10% class rank underperform academically relative to lower ranked students who graduate from highly competitive high schools. Compared with White students ranked at or below the third…
Descriptors: High Schools, Class Rank, Standardized Tests, Racial Differences
Schmidt, Peter – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Born out of one legal battle over affirmative action, the Texas college-admissions policy known as the "top 10 percent plan" is now at the center of another. The University of Texas at Austin is being challenged in U.S. District Court over its 2004 decision to return to using race-conscious admissions criteria after years without them.…
Descriptors: Class Rank, Public Colleges, Courts, Affirmative Action
Alon, Sigal; Tienda, Marta – American Sociological Review, 2007
This article uses four data sets to assess changes in the relative weights of test- and performance-based merit criteria on college enrollment during the 1980s and 1990s and considers their significance for affirmative action. Our results support the "shifting meritocracy" hypothesis, revealed by selective postsecondary institutions'…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Diversity (Institutional), Affirmative Action, Weighted Scores
Niu, Sunny Xinchun; Tienda, Marta; Cortes, Kalena – Economics of Education Review, 2006
This paper addresses how institutional selectivity influences college preferences and enrollment decisions of Texas seniors in the presence of a putatively race-neutral admissions policy--the top 10% law. We analyze a representative survey of Texas high school seniors as of spring, 2002, who were re-interviewed 1 year later to evaluate differences…
Descriptors: Colleges, Selective Admission, College Choice, Enrollment Influences

Casada, Jane; And Others – Journal of Dental Education, 1996
A study of 410 University of Texas (Houston) dental school graduates taking the Texas State Dental Board Examination immediately after graduation did not identify any characteristics strongly predicting success or failure, although there was a weak but insignificant relationship between class rank and passing. However, the fact that most test…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Class Rank, Dental Schools, Higher Education
Healy, Patrick – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1998
A 1997 Texas law requires universities to admit the top 10% percent of seniors from each Texas high school, opening a door for many Hispanic and Black seniors in schools with high minority populations. Observers are concerned some students may be underprepared for university work. Elite public universities around the country are watching to see if…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Admission Criteria, Class Rank, College Admission
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1 | 2