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Barker, Joanne; Kent, Anna – Australian Universities' Review, 2022
With the Australian international borders closed to international students due to the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19), Australian universities have experienced unanticipated financial losses. At the same time, many international students who would have chosen to study in Australia instead chose to enrol in universities in the US, UK and other…
Descriptors: International Education, Scholarships, Universities, COVID-19
Bulman, George – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022
This paper examines how private college and university endowments affect financial aid, admissions selectivity, and the economic and racial composition of incoming students. Because endowment levels are a function of expenditures and alumni giving, which are endogenous to the outcomes of interest, the design exploits changes in endowments stemming…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Endowment Funds, Student Financial Aid, Selective Admission
Angrist, Joshua D.; Pathak, Parag A.; Zárate, Román Andrés – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2019
The educational mismatch hypothesis asserts that students are hurt by affirmative action policies that place them in selective schools for which they wouldn't otherwise qualify. We evaluate mismatch in Chicago's selective public exam schools, which admit students using neighborhood-based diversity criteria as well as test scores. Regression…
Descriptors: Selective Admission, Affirmative Action, Admission Criteria, Public Schools
Foo, Aloysius; Yang, Peidong – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
Research in education has long noted teachers' role in assisting social and ideological reproduction. Separately, scholarship has also investigated the use of extra-curricular activities in equipping disadvantaged students with social and cultural capital, to embark on social mobility. Positioned at the intersection of these two apparently…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scholarships, Social Mobility, Teacher Role
Warshaw, Jarrett B.; McNaughtan, Jon; DeMonbrun, Matt – Higher Education Policy, 2021
Conventional wisdom suggests that a field of striving compels US public master's institutions (PMIs) to pursue prestige in the academic hierarchy. We posit that, due to their unique histories of democratizing college opportunity, PMIs face conflicting imperatives from two fields: an origin one of equity and another of striving. Our hypotheses are…
Descriptors: Universities, Public Colleges, Masters Programs, Graduate Study
Howard, Adam; Pine, Jamie; Muench, Weston; Peck, Sarah – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2020
The ways in which elite schools in Chile reproduce power and privilege within the nation's highly inequitable schooling system are largely ignored by researchers and the general public. In this article, the authors address this gap by identifying and exploring the primary class strategies that an elite school employs to secure their elite status.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Selective Admission, Power Structure, Social Stratification
Brantlinger, Andrew – Urban Education, 2020
This article presents a critique of a teacher quality agenda promoted by a network of elitiste organizations in the United States. Network leaders posit that gaps in teacher quality cause achievement gaps. Their solution is to incentivize the graduates of the nation's most selective colleges to teach in hard-to-staff schools. Summarizing prior…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, College Graduates, Colleges, Selective Admission
Furlong, John, Ed.; Lunt, Ingrid, Ed. – Higher Education Policy Institute, 2020
HEPI's last foray into the debate on academic selection suggested grammar schools are successful in helping their poorer pupils reach highly-selective universities. In this response, a diverse set of voices use the latest evidence to challenge the idea that grammar school systems serve pupils better than comprehensive schools. This collection of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Secondary Schools, Selective Admission
Lowe, Roy – History of Education, 2020
The origins of the charitable status of elite schools in England is a neglected topic. This article reconstructs the debate on the funding of schools which led to the establishment of the Charity Commission in 1853 and argues that it was the obdurate refusal of the Anglican Church to surrender its control of secondary education which first delayed…
Descriptors: Educational History, Churches, Secondary Education, Governance
Chen, Sunny; Schwartz, Emily; Le, Cindy; Pisacreta, Elizabeth Davidson – ITHAKA S+R, 2021
Each year, the country's most selective four-year institutions invest significant resources to recruit talented high school students from across the country. These students, mostly affluent and white, contemplate admission offers and consider moves to new locales to pursue their postsecondary plans. Yet, many of these selective institutions are…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, College Transfer Students, Graduation Rate, High School Students
Phillips, Nick – Hispania, 2021
This essay examines the state of Digital Humanities work in the subfield of literature from the Spanish speaking world. It provides a case study of a multiyear digital mapping project conducted with undergraduate students at a highly selective liberal arts college. This project serves as a means of examining the digital state of the field and…
Descriptors: Spanish, Fiction, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
Verger, Antoni; Moschetti, Mauro C.; Fontdevila, Clara – Comparative Education, 2020
Despite Public-Private Partnerships' (PPPs) growing popularity within education policy circles, research on their effects yields contradictory results. The understanding of PPP effects is limited by the prevalence of generalist analyses that neglect to acknowledge the exceptional heterogeneity of the policy frameworks in which PPPs crystallize.…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, Educational Policy, Public Sector, Private Sector
Leah Schmalzbauer – Russell Sage Foundation, 2023
Over the past twenty years, elite colleges and universities enacted policies that reshaped the racial and class composition of their campuses, and over the past decade, Latinos' college attendance notably increased. While discussions on educational mobility often focus on its perceived benefits -- that it will ultimately lead to social and…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Low Income Students, College Graduates, College Students
Bunnell, Tristan; Donnelly, Michael; Lauder, Hugh – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2021
Our paper reveals a significant under-reported emergent phenomenon: the graduates of the well-established 'Elite Traditional International Schools' worldwide are beginning to cluster in certain universities, in certain 'global cities'. As one might expect, New York and London are central to this clustering, alongside Boston, Toronto and Vancouver.…
Descriptors: Social Class, Advantaged, Selective Admission, Universities
Lo, William Yat Wai; Hou, Angela Yung-Chi – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2020
The literature suggests that recent years have witnessed a fundamental shift in higher education internationalisation. This paper argues that a reorientation of policy, which is upheld through an initiative known as the Higher Education Sprout Project, indicates the fundamental shift in higher education internationalisation in Taiwan. The paper…
Descriptors: Higher Education, International Education, Foreign Countries, Reputation