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Burdman, Pamela – Policy Analysis for California Education, PACE, 2015
There is growing concern that the remedial math courses taken by most community college students unnecessarily divert some students from earning a degree. Anecdotes of students who thought they had completed their math requirements in high school only to have remedial courses delay their progress through college are common. In addition, research…
Descriptors: Remedial Instruction, Educational Change, Student Placement, Educational Policy
Swail, Watson Scott – Higher Learning Research Communications, 2014
Although student retention, persistence, and graduation is a high priority for institutions and policymakers, graduation rates are not improving. Nowadays, more students from first-generation and low-income backgrounds have access to traditional higher education. In this essay, the author argues that an educational system that fails to prepare…
Descriptors: School Holding Power, Academic Persistence, Graduation Rate, First Generation College Students
Draelants, Hugues – Research Papers in Education, 2012
One hundred and twenty students successful at entering four of the most famous French "grandes ecoles" ("Ecole Normale Superieure" Ulm, Polytechnique, HEC, Sciences Po) were questioned about their institution's image. We focus on how the prestige of these institutions in the French society played a role in students' attraction…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Reputation, Selective Admission
Ma, Jennifer; Baum, Sandy; Pender, Matea; Welch, Meredith – College Board, 2016
In 2016-17, published tuition and fee prices rose slightly less than the year before. The rapid price growth observed during the Great Recession has abated, as typically happens when the economy recovers, but the rate of increase in tuition and fees continues to exceed inflation. More notable, however, is the pattern of the net prices students…
Descriptors: Trend Analysis, Tuition, Fees, College Students
Poliakoff, Michael; Alacbay, Armand – American Council of Trustees and Alumni, 2014
ACTA [American Council of Trustees and Alumni] today released a report that examines the country's most prestigious liberal arts colleges. Despite endowments soaring as high as $1.8 billion, nearly all institutions increased tuition during the Great Recession to finance bloated administrative spending, with many college presidents enjoying…
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, Reputation, Institutional Evaluation, Tuition
Tuttle, Christina Clark; Gleason, Philip; Furgeson, Joshua – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2012
As a condition of its i3 grant, KIPP contracted with an independent evaluator (Mathematica) to address a key research question: does KIPP maintain its demonstrated effectiveness as it scales? While this question sounds simple enough in theory, it poses several methodological and practical challenges. This paper outlines some of those key…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Comparative Analysis, Quasiexperimental Design, Control Groups
Nurnberg, Peter; Schapiro, Morton; Zimmerman, David – Economics of Education Review, 2012
This paper provides an econometric analysis of the matriculation decisions made by students accepted to Williams College, one of the nation's most highly selective colleges and universities. Using data for the Williams classes of 2008 through 2012 to estimate a yield model, we find that--conditional on the student applying to and being accepted by…
Descriptors: Grade Point Average, Standardized Tests, Student Financial Aid, Private Colleges
Glynn, Jennifer – Jack Kent Cooke Foundation, 2017
Today a college degree is considered the ticket to a good job and the gateway to economic advancement. A student's chances of gaining admission to college, however, are often based more on parental wealth than the student's achievements. At the nation's most selective colleges, three percent of incoming freshmen come from families in the bottom…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Campuses, Barriers, High Achievement
Dobbie, Will; Fryer, Roland G., Jr. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2011
Publicly funded exam schools educate many of the world's most talented students. These schools typically contain higher achieving peers, more rigorous instruction, and additional resources compared to regular public schools. This paper uses a sharp discontinuity in the admissions process at three prominent exam schools in New York City to provide…
Descriptors: Public Schools, High Schools, Selective Admission, Urban Schools
Elliott, Diane Cardenas – Journal of Catholic Higher Education, 2012
The purpose of this study was to examine structural diversity at Catholic colleges; more specifically, the variation in the student body diversity characteristics of a sample of freshman students matriculated at Catholic colleges. For the purpose of this article, diversity characteristics include background characteristics associated with student…
Descriptors: Catholics, Private Colleges, College Students, Student Diversity
Schneider, Mark – American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 2010
As the cost of higher education rises, more and more students are struggling over the decision to attend college. But they now have help from PayScale.com, which recently released data on the return on investment (ROI) from over five hundred colleges and universities. This "Outlook" interprets the data using Barron's selectivity…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Public Colleges, Outcomes of Education, Private Colleges
Mellanby, Jane; Zimdars, Anna – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2011
A questionnaire was administered to 1,929 applicants to Oxford University, including measures of trait anxiety, behavioural response to examinations and to breakdown in relationships. 635 of these applicants were admitted to the university and of these, 383 also responded to a questionnaire administered 4 years later, just before their final…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Applicants, Academic Achievement, Classification
Abdulkadiroglu, Atila; Angrist, Joshua D.; Pathak, Parag A. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2011
Talented students compete fiercely for seats at Boston and New York exam schools. These schools are characterized by high levels of peer achievement and a demanding curriculum tailored to each district's highest achievers. While exam school students clearly do very well in school, the question of whether an exam school education adds value…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Selective Admission, Attendance, Academic Achievement
Zha, Qiang – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2011
This paper analyzes how China has managed to embrace mass higher education in a short timeline, and examines how far this move has followed the existing or established patterns elsewhere through comparing its core aspects with those of four identifiable models of mass higher education: the American model, the Western European model, the Latin…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Higher Education, Ideology, Foreign Countries
Pathak, Parag A.; Sethuraman, Jay – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2010
This paper formally examines two competing methods of conducting a lottery in assigning students to schools, motivated by the design of the centralized high school student assignment system in New York City. The main result of the paper is that a single and multiple lottery mechanism are equivalent for the problem of allocating students to schools…
Descriptors: Urban Education, High School Students, Student Placement, Admission (School)