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Showing 121 to 135 of 205 results Save | Export
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Zhang, Liang; Ness, Erik C. – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2010
In this study, the authors use college enrollment and migration data to test the brain drain hypothesis. Their results suggest that state merit scholarship programs do indeed stanch the migration of "best and brightest" students to other states. In the aggregate and on average, the implementation of state merit aid programs increases the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Finance, Student Mobility, Student Recruitment
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Wiers-Jenssen, Jannecke – Journal of Studies in International Education, 2013
Full-degree mobility from Western countries is a topic that has been little researched. Existing literature tends to be normative; mobility is seen as an advantage per se. In this article it is questioned whether mobility is an advantage when investigating degree mobility and employability of students from the Nordic countries. Results show that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Occupational Mobility, Social Capital, Employment Potential
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Naumova, T. V. – Russian Education and Society, 2010
Russian scientists lag behind others in both remuneration and working conditions, and this has led many of them to leave science for other occupations or to leave Russia. While the country may benefit when a scientist chooses to enter business or politics, both society and Russian science are negatively affected when scientists emigrate. In order…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientists, Scientific Research, Professional Occupations
Ishitani, Terry T. – Association for Institutional Research (NJ1), 2011
Using national data, the present study first investigated interstate college migration. Unlike existing studies of interstate college migration, this study also tracked students to college graduation to explore their post-graduation migration, such as leaving to other states after graduating from in-state institutions and returning to home states…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Education Work Relationship, Brain Drain, Migration Patterns
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Marimon, Ramon; Lietaert, Matthieu; Grigolo, Michele – Higher Education in Europe, 2009
Many researchers trained in Europe leave to work abroad, namely in the USA. This brain-drain phenomenon is the result of a lack of openness and competition in European academic systems. Some aspects relating to the mobility of academic careers could make a difference in attracting--and maintaining--researchers, aside to serious structural reform.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Researchers, Brain Drain, Higher Education
Courrege, Diette – Education Week, 2011
The lack of parental and community support is one of the reasons educators say rural students have been among the least likely to go to college. Rural areas have a 27 percent college-enrollment rate for 18- to 24-year-olds, according to a 2007 report from the National Center for Education Statistics, its most recent, compared with the national…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Mentors, Enrollment Rate, Rural Areas
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Britez, Rodrigo; Peters, Michael A. – Policy Futures in Education, 2010
This article discusses some of the issues that surround the internationalization of higher education as a way to open discussion about the construction of an alternative cosmopolitical vision of the university, necessary if the university is to fulfill any historic tasks concerning the creation of globally aware citizens. The authors indicate that…
Descriptors: Higher Education, International Education, Global Approach, Cultural Pluralism
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Lee, Jenny J.; Kim, Dongbin – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2010
This study explored the reasons for current reverse mobility patterns in South Korea and how the country benefits from returning U.S. doctoral recipients in the forms of brain gain and brain circulation. Based on interviews of Korean faculty who studied in the U.S., this study found that while the political economy might help to explain why Korean…
Descriptors: Doctoral Degrees, Foreign Countries, Brain Drain, Interviews
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King, Russell; Findlay, Allan; Ahrens, Jill; Dunne, Mairead – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2011
This paper presents results of a questionnaire survey of 1400 Year 13 (final-year) school and sixth-form pupils in two contrasting areas of England, which asked them about their thoughts and plans to study at university abroad. Key questions that the survey sought to answer were the following. How many and what proportion of all higher education…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Academic Records, Holidays, Social Class
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Welch, Anthony R.; Zhen, Zhang – Higher Education Policy, 2008
In the global era, transnational flows of highly skilled individuals are increasing. In the much-touted global knowledge economy, the contribution of such diasporic individuals and the knowledge networks that they sustain are recognized as being of increasing importance. Brain circulation is of critical importance to the "giant…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Foreign Countries, Talent, Brain Drain
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Yang, Rui; Welch, Anthony R. – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2010
The master discourses of economic globalisation and the knowledge economy each cite knowledge diasporas as vital "trans-national human capital". Based on a case study of a major Australian university, this article examines the potential to deploy China's large and highly-skilled diaspora in the service of Chinese and Australian…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Human Capital, Foreign Countries, Global Approach
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West, Kazuko Ito – Journal of Mathematics Education at Teachers College, 2013
What would be one of the most sensible ways for a country to invest to achieve maximal economic growth? A recent study (Chetty, Friedman, & Rockoff, 2011) by economists at Harvard and Columbia Universities shows that better teacher quality results in significantly higher students' lifetime earnings. And investing in public school teachers…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Public Schools, Foreign Countries, Teacher Effectiveness
Clotfelter, Charles T., Ed. – University of Chicago Press, 2010
In higher education, the United States is the preeminent global leader, dominating the list of the world's top research universities. But there are signs that America's position of global leadership will face challenges in the future, as it has in other realms of international competition. "American Universities in a Global Market"…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Global Approach, Foreign Students, Graduate Students
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Gardner, Trevor George – Journal of Research on Christian Education, 2010
The article briefly summarizes seven challenges that faces the Seventh Day Adventist (SDA) tertiary institutions in the Caribbean. There is no exhaustive discussion of the challenges but each is clearly articulated. There is no attempt to address solution but the discussion of each challenge, however, provides opportunity for several inferences…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Postsecondary Education, Church Related Colleges, Barriers
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Lien, Donald – Education Economics, 2008
This paper considers the effects of a branch campus on the individual college education decision and the economic welfare of a developing country. There are a single domestic college and a single branch campus established by a foreign university. A graduate from the branch campus has an opportunity to emigrate and work abroad, earning a higher…
Descriptors: Economic Research, Overseas Employment, Multicampus Colleges, Brain Drain
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