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Trevethan, Helen – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
I offer this critical essay as a reminder of the prevalence of unproven negative dialogue about Initial Teacher Education (ITE) in New Zealand, taking selection practices as an example. The focus of this critical essay is the evidence base about selection of students into English-medium undergraduate ITE programmes. In New Zealand and elsewhere,…
Descriptors: Language of Instruction, Undergraduate Students, Preservice Teacher Education, Foreign Countries
Reginald M. Gooch; Vinetha K. Belur; Sara B. Haviland; Ou Lydia Liu – Journal of Postsecondary Student Success, 2024
Many institutions were forced by the COVID-19 pandemic to change admissions policies as a response to logistical challenges around testing. However, even as logistical challenges have resolved, pandemic-era changes to higher education testing policies which reduced or eliminated testing requirements have remained in place in many schools. Now,…
Descriptors: College Admission, Access to Education, College Entrance Examinations, Equal Education
Joanne Hughes; Rebecca Loader – Research Papers in Education, 2024
Northern Ireland has a deeply divided education system with demarcation most notable along ethno/religious and social class lines. The former is largely attributable to the historical organisation of the schools estate based on religion, and the latter is associated with a system of academic selection that filters children into grammar and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Admission Criteria, Elementary School Students, Equal Education
Barrett J. Taylor; Kelly Rosinger; Karly S. Ford – Sociology of Education, 2024
Admission to selective colleges has grown more competitive, yielding student bodies that are unrepresentative of the U.S. population. Admission officers report using sorting (e.g., GPA, standardized tests) and concertedly cultivated (e.g., extracurricular activities) and ascriptive status (e.g., whether an applicant identifies as a member of a…
Descriptors: College Admission, Selective Admission, Admission Criteria, Competitive Selection
Ee-Seul Yoon – Critical Education, 2024
This article examines a popularized term, the Global Education Reform Movement (GERM), and its underlying paradigm of neoliberalism. It elucidates neoliberalism's maddening effects on the education sector, especially public education. To analyze these effects, I draw from and adapt Michel Foucault's analytical approach to madness. My analysis…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Educational Change, Neoliberalism, Criticism
Erika J. Knapp; Whitney Mayo – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2023
The college admissions process (application, audition, acceptance) serves as a crucial milestone for many aspiring music educators. It also functions as a barrier to accessing the profession for historically marginalized students. In this article, we employ anti-racism as a lens to critically examine the admissions process as it exists in many…
Descriptors: Music Education, College Admission, Barriers, Minority Group Students
Miranda, Eveline De Medeiros; Sanchez, Edgar I. – ACT, Inc., 2022
As part of a larger research study entitled "Where Do Test Scores Fit in a Test-Optional Environment," the authors surveyed students who took the ACT on June 11, 2022, in order to better understand why high school students would take a standardized test like the ACT when they knew they were applying to test-optional institutions. Among…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, School Role, College Admission, Admission Criteria
Ward, LaWanda W. M. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2021
Anti-affirmative action legal discourse about U.S. higher education within selective institutions race-conscious admissions encompasses co-opted civil rights aims for racial equity in education that maintains white supremacy. Racially progressive efforts to include historically racially minoritized applicants of color have been met with unfounded…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, College Admission, Educational Discrimination, Reverse Discrimination
Newman, Daniel A.; Tang, Chen; Song, Q. Chelsea; Wee, Serena – International Journal of Testing, 2022
In considering whether to retain the GRE in graduate school admissions, admissions committees often pursue two objectives: (a) performance in graduate school (e.g., admitting individuals who will perform better in classes and research), and (b) diversity/fairness (e.g., equal selection rates between demographic groups). Drawing upon HR research…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, College Entrance Examinations, Admission Criteria, College Admission
N. A. Broer; J. L. van der Walt; C. C. Wolhuter – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2024
The Netherlands has a unique dual education system. The government funds both public and private schools. Parents have much freedom to set up schools to realize their religious ideals. The freedom of education enshrined in the Dutch Constitution is controversial. The question has arisen as to whether the government should fund private schools.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Schools, Federal Aid, Educational Finance
Castro, Erin L.; Magana, Sydney – Journal of College Student Development, 2020
In this article we argue that the practice of requisite criminal/ized history disclosure in college admissions enhances carceral state power. Situating institutions of higher education as key sites through which surveillance is practiced, we traced the available evidence regarding targeted punishment in the US and the ramifications of a criminal…
Descriptors: College Admission, Admission Criteria, Disclosure, Crime
Kidd, Ian James; Jago, Mark – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
John White defends the UK private school system from the accusation that it allows an unfair form of 'queue jumping' in university admissions. He offers two responses to this accusation, one based on considerations of harm, and one based on meritocratic distribution of university places. We will argue that neither response succeeds: the…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Access to Education, Admission Criteria, Equal Education
Eujin Park; Gabrielle Orum Hernández; Stacey J. Lee – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2024
Through a critical discourse analysis of three Asian American organizations' rhetoric around race and education, we explore the activism of Asian Americans working against affirmative action and other race-based educational policies. We examine the way these groups engage ideological discourses regarding race, civil rights, and the freedom to…
Descriptors: Asian American Students, College Students, Affirmative Action, College Admission
Ward, LaWanda W. M. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
Most education and legal scholarship overlook gendered-race themes in pre-Brown v. Board of Education desegregation higher education cases that remain relevant to examining post-"Brown" race-conscious admissions cases. The author engaged critical race feminism to create a counterstory with Ada Lois Sipuel Fisher, a U.S. Supreme Court…
Descriptors: Critical Race Theory, Feminism, Story Telling, Higher Education
Burns, David P. – Philosophical Inquiry in Education, 2022
This analysis will argue that university educators have an ethical obligation to advocate for admission policies that are not exclusively competitive in nature -- what will be referred to later as levelling and remedy approaches. This argument will be detailed in four stages. First, it will use an anecdote and an appeal to virtue to argue that…
Descriptors: Ethics, College Admission, Educational Policy, Competition