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Nicholas A. Bowman; Frank Fernandez; Solomon Fenton-Miller; Nicholas R. Stroup – Research in Higher Education, 2024
Legal education scholars have argued that law schools strategically use Students of Color for enrollment management purposes; they can admit more to meet admission targets, but they should not enroll so many that they need to open new course sections. As law school applications decline, we analyze enrollment panel data reported to the American Bar…
Descriptors: College Applicants, Law Schools, Minority Group Students, Enrollment Management
Anna Bull – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2025
In creative higher education (HE) undergraduate courses in the UK, women students are over-represented by a proportion of two-to-one. However, music HE shows almost the reverse gender balance, with women students under-represented. This article, theorising HE as hierarchically stratified according to institutional prestige, uses descriptive…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Music Education, Higher Education, Digital Literacy
Joanne Moore; Anna Mountford-Zimdars – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
Access to higher education is often competitive, and much attention has been placed on the question of admission decision-making in such high stakes situations. We identify various approaches to distributive justice and consider these under the framework developed by Pike distinguishes between 'egalitaria' (everyone gets the same); 'necessitia'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Admission, Educational Background, Enrollment Management
Grosz, Michel – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
I estimate the effect of attending an associate's degree in nursing program on nursing licensure. I use student-level academic data for all California community college students, matched to public records on all nursing licenses earned in the state. I produce causal estimates using random variation from admissions lotteries at a large nursing…
Descriptors: Nursing Education, Community Colleges, Certification, Associate Degrees
Emily R. Borcherding – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This qualitative case study examined the efficacy of one university's academic interventions in support of conditionally admitted (CA) students during the COVID-19 pandemic. The objective was to gain insights into how academic interventions changed for CA students and how the students used academic interventions during COVID-19 at one four-year…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, First Year Seminars, College Admission, Selective Admission
Jennifer Torgerson – ProQuest LLC, 2023
There is a nursing shortage in the United States which has become even more apparent during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite qualified applicants, thousands of students are turned away from educational programs each year as programs reach capacity limits. The rejection may have social, psychological, and economic consequences for the student.…
Descriptors: Nursing Education, College Applicants, Community Colleges, Selective Admission
Karolina Muhrman; Per Andersson – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2024
This article explores how the Swedish policy of municipal adult education (MAE) is interpreted, translated, and enacted in study and career counselling. The data consists of semi-structured interviews with adult education leaders and study and career counsellors. Swedish MAE is characterised by extensive marketisation, with many different…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adult Education, Counselors, Career Counseling
Nathan F. Alleman; Cara Cliburn Allen; Sarah E. Madsen – American Educational Research Journal, 2024
Studies about collegiate food insecurity show its prevalence as a national issue that disproportionately affects students from marginalized groups. This study further contextualizes this work, examining the ways that multiply-marginalized students navigate systems of privilege and opportunity at selective, normatively affluent universities to meet…
Descriptors: College Students, Minority Group Students, Disproportionate Representation, Hunger
Yuriy V. Karpov – Academic Questions, 2024
Many American parents, whose dream is to have their kids enrolled in one of the elite American Universities, do not suspect that the realization of this dream will result in the almost guaranteed leftist indoctrination of their children. The dominance of leftist ideology at elite American universities has serious implications not only on the…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Universities, Institutional Characteristics, Reputation
Verharen, Charles C. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2022
This essay contrasts Nietzsche's remarks on elite education with W.E.B. Du Bois' demand for democratized education. The essay takes their remarks as springboards for a twenty-first century philosophy of education rather than an historical account of their philosophies. Both thinkers cultivated Kant and Hegel's dream that the spirit of freedom…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Selective Admission, Democracy, Equal Education
Jennifer Wallace; Jennifer Feldman – Cultural Studies and Transdisciplinarity in Education, 2022
As the penultimate chapter, the focus is on what aspects of their lives the scholarship recipients, reflecting back, feel have changed over time as a result of their experiences in the elite school field. Drawing on Bourdieu's concept of habitus, the discussion in this chapter is analyzed and discussed in relation to the "malleability"…
Descriptors: Scholarships, Reflection, Selective Admission, Schools
Jennifer Wallace; Jennifer Feldman – Cultural Studies and Transdisciplinarity in Education, 2022
This chapter problematizes the practice of the giving of scholarships as a form of a gift by drawing on Mauss's (The gift: forms and functions of exchange in archaic societies. Routledge, London, 1969) notion that gifts are not as simple as they may appear as they are constructed around relationships of reciprocity, where to give is to expect to…
Descriptors: Scholarships, Problems, Expectation, Donors
Nathan F. Alleman; Cara Cliburn Allen; Sarah E. Madsen – Johns Hopkins University Press, 2025
Beneath the veneer of prestige and promise, a hidden issue pervades the campuses of America's selective universities. In "Starving the Dream," Nathan F. Alleman, Cara Cliburn Allen, and Sarah E. Madsen reveal the startling contradiction between the celebrated opportunities of these prestige-oriented institutions and the food insecurity…
Descriptors: Universities, Selective Admission, Reputation, Institutional Characteristics
Matt S. Giani; Richard Murphy; Stella M. Flores; Jori Barash; Brian Dixon; Julio Mena Bernal – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
Low-income high-achieving students are less likely than high-income peers to enroll in selective colleges. Financial certainty interventions can address administrative burdens that stifle their enrollment, even when colleges are tuition-free for them. However, we do not know whether these interventions are effective when students enjoy admissions…
Descriptors: High Achievement, Low Income Students, College Admission, Intervention
Tom Swiderski – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2025
Twenty-nine states require or allow all 11th graders to take the ACT or SAT in school, for free, eliminating access to testing as a barrier to college entry. I examine whether this affects postsecondary outcomes using state-aggregated panel data and time-varying difference-in-differences methods. I find policy adoption led to 2% increases in…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, High School Students, Grade 11, Outcomes of Education

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