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Barrett J. Taylor; Brendan Cantwell – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
Although universities are often characterised as 'elite', institutions can attain status in multiple dimensions--reputation, research, money and selectivity. We studied 21st century public universities in the United States, using latent profile analysis to identify which universities followed each path to status. Most universities pursued none,…
Descriptors: Research Universities, Status, Institutional Characteristics, Differences
Meredith E. Young; Sneha Shankar; Christina St-Onge – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2024
Medical school admissions is a contentious and high stakes selection activity. Many assessment approaches are available to support selection; but how are decisions about building, monitoring, and adapting admissions systems made? What shapes the processes and practices that underpin selection decisions? We explore how these decisions are made…
Descriptors: Medical Schools, College Admission, Selective Admission, Undergraduate Study
Jonathan T. Schulte; Jessica Benson-Egglenton – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
English university admissions increasingly make use of contextual offers, where applicants with certain socio-demographic characteristics can be offered marginally lower entry conditions. This paper presents novel insights on the impact of contextual offer policy on one institutions' patterns of enrolment in 2022/23 via a mixed methods…
Descriptors: Admission Criteria, Selective Admission, College Admission, Foreign Countries
Binwei Lu; Jake Anders; Nadia Siddiqui; Xin Shao – Educational Review, 2024
Extensive literature has compared the effect of selective schools with that of non-selective schools on pupil outcomes in England. However, evaluation of selective systems has been sparse and contradictory. From the perspective of educational equity, this study assesses the potential impact of academically selective school systems on pupils'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Selective Admission, Admission Criteria, Educational Attainment
John Fischetti; Ann Hill; Debra Lynch; Joanne Pettit; Joanne Rutkowski; Viv White; Deborah Chadwick; Barry Down – Discover Education, 2024
Year 12 students in Big Picture Learning schools across Australia now use portfolios and interviews to apply for and gain entry to their first choice of university degree. They receive admission on the strength of portfolio evidence mapped to a new non-ATAR qualification, known as the International Big Picture Learning Credential (IBPLC). Since…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Longitudinal Studies, Guided Pathways, College Admission
Oscar Espinoza; Luis González; Luis Sandoval; Bruno Corradi; Noel McGinn; Trinidad Vera – Educational Review, 2024
Some universities, often the most prestigious in a higher education system, select qualified applicants solely on the basis of their measured academic or cognitive abilities. The universities' assumption is that these cognitive abilities are an accurate and complete measure of the applicants' capacity to benefit from university study. This study…
Descriptors: Selective Admission, College Admission, Foreign Countries, Admission Criteria
R. Joseph Waddington; Ron Zimmer; Mark Berends – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2024
A pervasive issue in the school choice literature is whether schools of choice cream skim students by enrolling high-achieving, less-challenging, or less-costly students. Similarly, schools of choice may "push out" low-achieving, more-challenging, or more-costly students. Using longitudinal student-level data from Indiana, we created…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Educational Vouchers, Selective Admission, Educational Background
Kate E. Snyder; Maxwell I. Bartley; Allison Fowler – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2024
Recent research into imposter phenomenon, or internal feelings of questioning competence, has shifted away from conceptualizing the feeling as an individual characteristic that requires an individual solution toward instead examining the role of context. We used a 2 (Generational Status: First Generation vs. Continuing Generation) × 3…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Selective Admission, Colleges, Self Concept
Ee-Seul Yoon – Peabody Journal of Education, 2024
This study examines the extent to which school choice in the Toronto Catholic District School Board impacts equity and segregation. This examination is important because full public funding for the Board should adhere to the goals of public education, namely, equity and inclusion of all students. A critical policy geography perspective is applied…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Catholic Schools, Equal Education, School Choice
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
Oscar Espinoza; Luis Sandoval; Luis Eduardo González; Bruno Corradi; Noel McGinn; Trinidad Vera – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
How does a policy of free tuition affect student applications to universities? This article assesses how free tuition influences applications in terms of the selectivity of the university, length of the degree program, cost of the program, and application to a program in the STEM field. The study based on a quasi-experimental design was carried…
Descriptors: Tuition, College Choice, Costs, Program Content
Daury Jansen; Louise Elffers; Suzanne Jak; Monique L. L. Volman – Oxford Review of Education, 2024
The prevalence of private supplementary tutoring (i.e. shadow education) is growing, particularly in nations with selective school exams. The hypothesis that tutoring attendance rises as pressure to perform increases has not yet been tested. Therefore, our research question is: does the likelihood of attending shadow education increase with an…
Descriptors: Exit Examinations, Secondary School Students, Secondary Schools, Foreign Countries
Binwei Lu; Nadia Siddiqui – Educational Review, 2024
The impact of academically selective schools on children's learning achievement has received global attention for decades. Despite the persistence of early-age selection in many countries, evidence of its impacts is mixed. This study analysed national achievement data covering 149,072 secondary school students and examined whether academically…
Descriptors: Selective Admission, Academic Achievement, School Effectiveness, Elementary Schools
Karolina Muhrman; Per Andersson – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2024
This article explores how the Swedish policy of municipal adult education (MAE) is interpreted, translated, and enacted in study and career counselling. The data consists of semi-structured interviews with adult education leaders and study and career counsellors. Swedish MAE is characterised by extensive marketisation, with many different…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adult Education, Counselors, Career Counseling
Nathan F. Alleman; Cara Cliburn Allen; Sarah E. Madsen – American Educational Research Journal, 2024
Studies about collegiate food insecurity show its prevalence as a national issue that disproportionately affects students from marginalized groups. This study further contextualizes this work, examining the ways that multiply-marginalized students navigate systems of privilege and opportunity at selective, normatively affluent universities to meet…
Descriptors: College Students, Minority Group Students, Disproportionate Representation, Hunger