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Harker, Richard; Nash, Roy – 1997
In New Zealand, single-sex public schools are held in greater esteem by the community. Because single-sex public schools are more popular than coeducational public schools, the single-sex schools in larger population areas have selective admission policies to screen the large number of applicants. This paper argues that single-sex schools end up…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Coeducation, Elementary Secondary Education, Females
Lentz, Linda P. – 1980
A study investigated whether changes occurred in women's career success as a result of four years attendance at either a women's or a coeducational college. It is a follow-up to a 1975 study of the career success of entering college women. The 1979 graduates of generally comparable colleges (six women's and nine coeducational) indicated career…
Descriptors: Career Development, Coeducation, Comparative Analysis, Females
Sevitch, Benjamin – 1981
Prevailing animosity toward blacks in New England prior to the Civil War is demonstrated in this case study of Prudence Crandall's attempt to establish a school for Negro girls in Canterbury, Connecticut, in 1833. Prudence Crandall, a quaker schoolmistress, was the successful proprietor of a school for girls from socially prominent families in…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Access to Education, Blacks, Case Studies
Grant, Geraldine P.; Martin, James A. – 1990
Reasons for the predominance of males in public school administrative positions are explored in this study. Methodology involved a survey of 350 graduates (175 female and 175 male) of principal certification programs in West Virginia, which yielded 258 responses, and followup interviews with 21 females who had identified sex discrimination as a…
Descriptors: Administrator Characteristics, Administrators, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Pratt, Linda K.; Gentemann, Karen M. – 1984
The use of a combination of traditional cognitive admissions criteria and noncognitive variables in predicting retention of college students is discussed. The focus is on improving prediction by analyzing various subgroups separately rather than using the entire population as a sample. The subjects were freshmen in the fall semester of 1978 at a…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Academic Persistence, Admission Criteria, Black Colleges