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Hearn, James C.; Burns, Rachel – Journal of Higher Education, 2021
Numerous observers and critics of higher education, including some policymakers, have suggested that hiring and maintaining faculty on tenure lines is a primary source of inefficiency in colleges and universities. These "disrupters" argue that reducing commitments to tenure will lead to cost savings and more effective adaptations to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Tenure, College Faculty, Efficiency
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Brown, Michael; Klein, Carrie – Journal of Higher Education, 2020
The proliferation of information technology tools in higher education has resulted in an explosion of data about students and their contexts. Yet, current policies governing these data are limited in their usefulness for informing students, instructors, and administrators of their rights and responsibilities related to data use because they are…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Privacy, School Policy, Policy Analysis
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Holland, Megan M.; Ford, Karly Sarita – Journal of Higher Education, 2021
Elite higher education institutions work hard to secure diverse classes, and students seek out these institutions in part because they believe that diversity will enhance their own educational experiences. Institutional theories would predict that practices set by the elite institutions in the field would isomorphically trickle down, however, case…
Descriptors: Reputation, College Students, Student Diversity, Diversity (Institutional)
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Bottia, Martha Cecilia; Stearns, Elizabeth; Mickelson, Roslyn Arlin; Moller, Stephanie; Jamil, Cayce – Journal of Higher Education, 2020
This article investigates whether attending a community college is related to an increase in the number of students majoring and graduating with degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) at four-year colleges. We follow a longitudinal sample of students in North Carolina from middle school through college graduation,…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, College Attendance, Majors (Students), STEM Education
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Klasik, Daniel; Hutt, Ethan L. – Journal of Higher Education, 2019
Recent trends in higher education (rising debt, school closures, increasing tuition) have increased interest in improving accountability and oversight in U.S. higher education beyond current accreditation practices. Common solutions include using quantitative measures like graduation and default rates to benchmark performance. Using historical…
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Educational Trends, Educational History, Comparative Analysis
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Rodriguez, Awilda – Journal of Higher Education, 2018
Many have called for improved alignment between high school graduation and college admission requirements. However, few have empirically examined the extent to which courses needed for college admission are not offered by high schools, which I call underalignment. Using high school-level data from the Office for Civil Rights, I examined high…
Descriptors: High School Students, Mathematics Education, College Admission, Competitive Selection
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Anderson, R. Kirk – Journal of Higher Education, 2019
This article utilizes ethnographic and philosophical methods to consider the ethical dimensions of responding to student activists protesting racial and other forms of social inequality. I consider the case of State University, a public institution that experienced a conflict during the 2015-2016 school year provoked by national conversations…
Descriptors: Activism, Self Concept, State Universities, Ethnography
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Creusere, Marlena; Zhao, Hengxia; Bond Huie, Stephanie; Troutman, David R. – Journal of Higher Education, 2019
This study examined intergenerational mobility among former students of The University of Texas System (n = 98,199) by comparing parental household income while the students were in college to students' income five years after exiting the system. The proportion of students who experienced upward mobility relative to their parents were estimated,…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, College Graduates, Gender Differences, Race
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Haviland, Don; Alleman, Nathan F.; Cliburn Allen, Cara – Journal of Higher Education, 2017
Collegiality, which indicates respect, a voice in decision making, and a commitment to the common good, is central to academic governance and faculty culture. However, as faculty work is increasingly unbundled, little is known about how concepts traditionally applied to tenure-track faculty, such as collegiality and the collegium (to which access…
Descriptors: Collegiality, College Faculty, Church Related Colleges, Research Universities
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Li, Amy Y. – Journal of Higher Education, 2019
Performance funding policies allocate state appropriations to public institutions based in part on retention and completion outcomes, and equity metrics allocate additional funding for graduating historically underserved students. Through interviews of 52 college administrators and state policymakers, I explore campus responses to performance…
Descriptors: Disproportionate Representation, Administrator Attitudes, Institutional Mission, Equal Education
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Liera, Román; Dowd, Alicia C. – Journal of Higher Education, 2019
On many college campuses, faculty are being called on to act as change agents for racial equity. Through narrative inquiry analysis using the theoretical constructs of boundary crossing and boundary objects, this case study examined learning among faculty (n = 12) who attempted to broker structural changes at their universities through…
Descriptors: Equal Education, College Faculty, Action Research, Race
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Beattie, Irenee R.; Thiele, Megan – Journal of Higher Education, 2016
College students who interact with professors and peers about academic matters have better college outcomes. Although institutional factors influence engagement, prior scholarship has not systematically examined whether class sizes affect students' academic interactions, nor whether race or first-generation status moderate such effects. We…
Descriptors: Social Class, College Faculty, College Students, Class Size
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Taylor, Barrett J.; Cantwell, Brendan; Slaughter, Sheila – Journal of Higher Education, 2013
We conceptualize colleges and universities as embedded in quasi-markets, meaning competitive sites created by policy, that disfavor the humanities. We therefore posit that increased revenues from a quasi-market to predict institutional de-emphasis of the humanities. Results indicate that private colleges and universities follow this pattern while…
Descriptors: Humanities, Higher Education, Economic Factors, Competition
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Santos, Jose L.; Cabrera, Nolan L.; Fosnacht, Kevin J. – Journal of Higher Education, 2010
Authors examine the proportion of undergraduate applications, admissions, and enrollments preceding, during, and after Proposition 209 while accounting for the relative growth in University of California eligibility for underrepresented minorities (URMs). They employed standard deviation analyses to measure dispersion of the URMs to non-URMs.…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Disproportionate Representation, Minority Group Students, College Applicants
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Johnson, Eldon L. – Journal of Higher Education, 1987
Thomas Jefferson and the University of Virginia as the quintessential beginning of the state university is seen as simplistic. Two contributors to the new type university, William R. Davie and Abraham Baldwin are discussed. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Administrators, Adoption (Ideas), College Administration, Educational History
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