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Fiona Gogescu – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2025
This paper explores the way in which elite students from Germany and Romania understand the role of talent, effort, and structural factors in shaping educational success and failure. The image of a successful student aligns with the requirements of the selection processes, with Romanian students emphasising effort, and German students projecting…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intelligence, Ability, Social Systems
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Florent Girardin; Inès Blal; Renaud Lunardo – Journal of Marketing for Higher Education, 2024
Higher education institutions (HEIs) engage more and more in branding activities to sustain an advantage in an increasingly high competitive environment. In such a pressing managerial context, research on brand management in the specific context of higher education expanded over the past few years. While research indicates that brand authenticity…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Marketing, College Choice, Reputation
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Herbaut, Estelle – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2022
Inequalities in access to elite higher education institutions are central in the horizontal dimension of social stratification in higher education. Previous studies have consistently shown large social inequalities in access from French "grandes écoles" (GE), but there is limited empirical evidence on the effect of alternative admission…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Competitive Selection, Institutional Characteristics, Reputation
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Baum, Sandy; McPherson, Michael S. – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2011
The world of higher education is a world of sorting, selecting, and ranking--on both sides of the market. Colleges select students to recruit and then to admit; students choose where to apply and which offer to accept. The sorting process that gets the most attention is in the higher reaches of the market, where it is not too much to say that…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Admission, Access to Education, Scaling
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Dowd, Alicia C.; Cheslock, John J.; Melguizo, Tatiana – Journal of Higher Education, 2008
This article reports a study that improves the authors' understanding of the potential impact of expanded community college transfer access to elite institutions by examining a variety of key questions using two national databases with complementary strengths. By estimating the number of low-income community college students currently transferring…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Community Colleges, Low Income, College Students
Rooney, John F., Jr. – 1980
Various aspects of the collegiate sports scene are examined with special emphasis on recruitment practices. It is suggested that college football and basketball satisfy two public demands: the desire for high level sports entertainment and (particularly in more remote areas) the need for national recognition of local accomplishment. In their…
Descriptors: Athletes, Athletics, Basketball, Change Strategies
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Martin, Warren Bryan – Change, 1981
Comparative data are gathered on (1) the institutional and nontransferrable fellow awards and (2) individual and portable awards of the Danforth Fellowship program. Results indicate that students attending elite universities will overwhelm their competitors in a national competition that is academically oriented and that open competition does not…
Descriptors: Awards, Comparative Analysis, Competitive Selection, Educational Finance
Wright, B. Ann – College Board Review, 1991
Media ranking of colleges is often superficial and only further confuses families and prospective students. In addition, some colleges are excluding students to present a "selective" profile. Rationality in admissions can return, when parents and students become knowledgeable about the process, counselors interpret changes, and colleges give…
Descriptors: Admission Criteria, College Admission, College Bound Students, College Choice
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Girod de l'Ain, Bertrand – Higher Education, 1981
Institutions wishing to increase the perceived value of their degrees or awards do so by increasing demand for those degrees, by stimulating applications for admission (the certifying effect) and even reducing graduates. Receipt of one of these degrees increases chances of success and affluence (the consumer effect). (MSE)
Descriptors: College Applicants, Competitive Selection, Degrees (Academic), Educational Benefits
Luciano, Lani – Money, 1986
Although competition at top colleges may be stiff, there are ways to improve the chances of admission, including: careful high school course and extracurricular activity selection to highlight academic, creative, leadership, initiative, and maturity characteristics; application and interview approaches; college choice; and timing. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Admission Criteria, College Admission, College Applicants
Moll, Richard – 1979
Truths and myths involved with student admission to Ivy League colleges are revealed by a director of admissions whose experience includes admission work at Vassar, Bowdoin, Harvard and Yale. Several basic concepts are offered as fact: most private colleges in America today are not highly selective; many colleges pose as being more selective than…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Admission Criteria, Admissions Counseling, Codes of Ethics