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Hee Sun Park; Ezgi Ulusoy; Hye Eun Lee; Mikyoung Kim – SAGE Open, 2024
By looking at the relationship between workplace culture and gender identity, this research examines ways to potentially improve women's satisfaction and perceptions of female workers in this presently disadvantageous work environment in Korea. Drawing from previous criticism for having prioritized inter-group processes over particular social…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Womens Education, Work Environment, Work Attitudes
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Yi Hao; Lisa Milne – William & Mary Educational Review, 2018
As William & Mary celebrates the 100th anniversary of admitting women students as the first public college in Virginia to institute a co-educational system, this paper explores the life and times of the women who have shaped the College's legacy for future women students. In researching the first women at William & Mary, we have found…
Descriptors: Females, Womens Education, Public Colleges, Educational History
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Bilal, Muhammad – American Educational Research Journal, 2019
Education in Pakistan is no longer a matter of indifference to the rest of the world. Typically, concern is focused on the role played by the madrasah (Islamic religious school; plural madaaris) as the dominant provider of education. The rise in the number of English-medium education institutions countrywide does not enter such accounts. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethnography, Misconceptions, Educational Trends
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Kari Roberts; Roxanne Hughes – Journal of STEM Outreach, 2019
Informal STEM education programs have become venues wherein girls can improve their sense of belonging and potential success (STEM identity) through interactions with role models and seeing how STEM fields are relevant to them. Despite decades of advocacy for single-sex programs' role in improving girls' STEM identity, few studies have found…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Females, Womens Education, Self Concept
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Trolian, Teniell L.; Jach, Elizabeth A.; Ogren, Christine A.; Hanson, Jana M. – Research in Higher Education, 2018
This study considers how institutional histories of admitting women are associated with present college experiences, and uses data from the Wabash National Study of Liberal Arts Education to compare the experiences of women at women's colleges or former women's colleges to those of women at former men's colleges and colleges that have always been…
Descriptors: Womens Education, College Admission, Student Experience, Institutional Characteristics
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Kratzok, Sara – New Directions for Higher Education, 2010
Since their creation in the latter part of the nineteenth century, women's colleges in America have undergone many significant changes. In 1960, over 230 women's colleges were in operation; over the next forty years more than 75 percent chose to admit men or shut their doors entirely (Miller-Bernal, 2006a). This chapter will shed light on the…
Descriptors: Single Sex Colleges, Females, Coeducation, Womens Education
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Sandekian, Robyn E.; Weddington, Michael; Birnbaum, Matthew; Keen, J. Katée – Journal of Studies in International Education, 2015
Saudi student enrollment in U.S. colleges and universities has nearly tripled since 2009-2010, in large part due to the King Abdullah Scholarship Program. The representation of Saudi females is also increasing due to the loosening of Saudi Arabia's long-standing restrictions on women's travel and acceptable fields of study and careers. This…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Graduate Students, Doctoral Programs, Females
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Riley, Karen L. – American Educational History Journal, 2010
In the current vernacular, co-education means the education of the sexes together within an institutional setting. Once a phenomenon, today, women enjoy nearly equal status on campuses that were at one time bastions of "maleness." Moreover, the counter-culture revolution of the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s, ushered in a new…
Descriptors: Coeducation, African American Students, White Students, Womens Education
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Davis, James H.; Ruhe, John; Lee, Monle; Rajadhyaksha, Ujvala – Journal of Management Education, 2011
This study questions the widely held assumption, particularly in the United States, that coeducation is best. Previous research supports the development of single-sex education for both female and male students. This study examines how the learning climate of the coeducation environment seems to affect the character development of female business…
Descriptors: Single Sex Schools, Sex Education, Altruism, Coeducation
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Taylor, Sarah E.; Scepansky, James A.; Lounsbury, John W.; Gibson, Lucy W. – Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice, 2010
Personality traits of coeducational students have been shown to correlate with early withdrawal intention from college (Lounsbury, Saudargas, & Gibson, 2004). The current study investigated the relationship between the Big Five personality traits as well as seven narrow personality traits in relation to withdrawal intention among 103 female…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Females, Intention, Womens Education
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Harford, Judith – Education Research and Perspectives, 2008
The establishment of the National University of Ireland (NUI) in 1908 brought an end to a protracted dispute over the "Irish university question" which had dominated the Irish political agenda at least since the 1850s. The central issue throughout this entire period was the provision of acceptable university education for lay Catholics,…
Descriptors: Females, College Admission, Universities, Catholics
Salomone, Rosemary – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
The recent announcement that Randolph-Macon Woman's College will admit male students has triggered yet another round in the continuing debate over women's colleges. At Randolph-Macon itself, the news was met with the usual mix of public displays: As students and alumnae protested with signs reading "Coed is a four-letter word," administrators and…
Descriptors: Females, Emotional Development, Declining Enrollment, Single Sex Colleges
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Thomas, Marge Miskelly – Initiatives, 1991
Offers account of practical and political aspects of maintaining counterpoint, mini-war against coeducation that captured minds and emotions of people and media around the world. Describes story of Mills College and events that followed college's aborted decision to become coeducational. (NB)
Descriptors: Coeducation, College Students, Females, Higher Education
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McPhie, Laura E. – Initiatives, 1991
Looks at coeducation decisions made by Smith and Amherst Colleges in 1970s, Smith reaffirming its commitment to separate education and Amherst changing from all-male to coeducational college. Describes contrasting bases for the decisions made by the two colleges. (NB)
Descriptors: Coeducation, College Students, Females, Higher Education
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Diehl, Lesley A. – American Psychologist, 1986
The paradox of G. Stanley Hall seems to be his stance against coeducation simultaneous with his role as an educator of women. His theories must be considered in the context of the prevailing attitudes of the early 20th century toward the issue of sex differences. Hall was consistent in translating his theories into practice. (Author/VM)
Descriptors: Coeducation, Educational Policy, Females, Higher Education
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