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Katherine Davey – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2025
Although higher education is positioned as a site of opportunity for young women in the UK, not all female applicants experience straightforward pathways into this arena. This paper focuses on a group of 16 high-achieving girls from working-class backgrounds who are striving for academic success, in the form of top grades and places at high-tariff…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, College Students, Working Class
Caitlin Murphy Brust; Hannah Widmaier – Educational Theory, 2024
In this paper, Caitlin Murphy Brust and Hannah Widmaier begin with the assumption that highly selective institutions of higher education in the United States have a duty to promote civic equality. They employ Wendy Salkin's theory of informal political representation to examine how highly selective institutions should go about promoting civic…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Civics, Citizenship Responsibility, Student Responsibility
Lucia Thesen – Multilingual Matters, 2024
This book seeks to disrupt the narrative about the process of academic writing and the written products which are currently valued in the university by juxtaposing the messiness and deletions of the writing process with the hegemonic imaginary of what research writing "should" look like. The author uses writing as both a subject and a…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Writing (Composition), Graduate Students, Universities
Oscar Espinoza; Luis Eduardo González; Luis Sandoval; Noel McGinn; Bruno Corradi – Research Papers in Education, 2024
In Chile many university students do not persist to graduation. Some students dropped out in the first year, others later. The objective of this study, based on students admitted to but not graduating from selective universities, was to identify factors associated with their academic success and length of persistence before withdrawal. The 707…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Selective Admission, Foreign Countries, Academic Achievement
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
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
Ye, Rebecca – Educational Review, 2022
This paper considers the COVID-19 pandemic as a test that has disrupted the flow of a particular type of social and physical mobility. It takes pathways embarked upon by students from Asian countries to "prestigious" anglophone universities as its focal point of analysis, considering how the residential, consecratory experience of…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Universities, Selective Admission
Kathryn Moeller – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2024
This essay uses Paulo Freire as inspiration of thinking about the limits and possibilities of building bridges between elite universities in the Global North and communities around the world given the historic and present-day entanglements between these universities and empire, colonisation, and epistemic violence. It sheds lights on how…
Descriptors: Developed Nations, Universities, Competitive Selection, Institutional Characteristics
Saman Ebadi; Rana Rahimi; Maryam Salari – International Journal of Language Testing, 2024
Using Kane's interpretive argument model and Messick's validity argument approach, this study rigorously examined faculty and PhD candidate's perspectives on PhD admission interviews in Iranian universities. We interviewed 10 professors and PhD interviewees which provided comprehensive insight into nuanced perspectives. We conducted rigorous…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Doctoral Students, Graduate School Faculty, Student Attitudes
Laura Fyfe; Bill Heinrich; Adam M. Kanar; Katrina D'Intino – Industry and Higher Education, 2024
This study explored how university students in North America acquired the ability to express their career-related competencies in the context of a pre-professional career education program. We examined the intersection of happenstance learning theory (HLT) and experiential learning theory (ELT) to facilitate significant experiences that inspired…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, College Students, Articulation (Speech), Competence
Markus Seyfried; Stefan Hollenberg; Judith Heße-Husain – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2024
Research on student selection mostly focuses on accepted applicants and the effects of selection procedures. In this sense, most samples seem to be biased, which is well-reflected in the literature. The present study investigates student selection regarding students who had been initially de-selected but finally succeeded in the admission process.…
Descriptors: Admission Criteria, Selective Admission, Stakeholders, Technology
Hillman, Nick – Institute for College Access & Success, 2022
The Pell Grant is targeted to students with the greatest financial need, and many policymakers find the Pell Grant a useful policy lever for promoting access and success for students from lower- and moderate-income backgrounds. There are several examples where policymakers use Pell eligibility to allocate resources and hold colleges accountable…
Descriptors: Grants, Federal Aid, Enrollment, Graduation Rate
Guzmán-Valenzuela, Carolina – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2023
Latin American universities have been subject to old and new forms of colonialism that act concurrently. Old forms of colonialism are based on a matrix of race and labour divisions that universities have inherited, reproduced, and reinforced. New forms of colonialism are attaching to global forces that promote a world class university model based…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Colonialism, Universities, Foreign Countries
Lyndsey El Amoud; Annalisa L. Raymer; Renee Tan – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2025
This chapter examines three distinct approaches to lifelong learning to illustrate workforce and societal development efforts in Europe, Singapore, and the United States. The case studies bring to the fore various complex issues, including, in the case of Europe, ensuring more equitable access to workforce development initiatives for all.…
Descriptors: Labor Force Development, Cross Cultural Studies, Lifelong Learning, Economic Development
Bleemer, Zachary – Center for Studies in Higher Education, 2021
I study the efficacy of test-based meritocracy in college admissions by evaluating the impact of a grade-based "top percent'' policy implemented by the University of California. Eligibility in the Local Context (ELC) provided large admission advantages to the top four percent of 2001-2011 graduates from each California high school. I…
Descriptors: Universities, College Admission, College Applicants, Eligibility