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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
Nicholas Lemann; Marvin Krislov, Contributor; Prudence Carter, Contributor; Patricia Gándara, Contributor – Princeton University Press, 2024
In the 1930s, American colleges and universities began to screen applications using the SAT, a mass-administered, IQ-descended standardized test. The widespread adoption of the test accompanied the development of the world's first mass higher education system--and served to promote the idea that the United States was becoming a…
Descriptors: Standardized Tests, Higher Education, College Entrance Examinations, College Admission
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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
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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
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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
Grosz, Michel – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
I estimate the effect of attending an associate's degree in nursing program on nursing licensure. I use student-level academic data for all California community college students, matched to public records on all nursing licenses earned in the state. I produce causal estimates using random variation from admissions lotteries at a large nursing…
Descriptors: Nursing Education, Community Colleges, Certification, Associate Degrees
Emily R. Borcherding – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This qualitative case study examined the efficacy of one university's academic interventions in support of conditionally admitted (CA) students during the COVID-19 pandemic. The objective was to gain insights into how academic interventions changed for CA students and how the students used academic interventions during COVID-19 at one four-year…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, First Year Seminars, College Admission, Selective Admission
Jennifer Torgerson – ProQuest LLC, 2023
There is a nursing shortage in the United States which has become even more apparent during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite qualified applicants, thousands of students are turned away from educational programs each year as programs reach capacity limits. The rejection may have social, psychological, and economic consequences for the student.…
Descriptors: Nursing Education, College Applicants, Community Colleges, Selective Admission
Vivian Yuen Ting Liu; Veronica Minaya; Di Xu – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Dual enrollment (DE) is one of the fastest growing programs that support the high school-to-college transition. Yet, there is limited empirical evidence about its impact on either students' college application choices or admission outcomes. Using a fuzzy regression discontinuity approach on data from two cohorts of ninth-grade students in one…
Descriptors: Dual Enrollment, College Applicants, School Choice, College Admission
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Kemelbayeva, Saule – Education Economics, 2022
More selective universities are presumably better in quality and expected to provide better labour market outcomes for their graduates -- returns premia. However, various empirical applications have found that part of it should be attributed to selectivity. Using the data on recent higher education graduates' entry salaries with a fuzzy regression…
Descriptors: Selective Admission, College Admission, Education Work Relationship, Outcomes of Education
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Templeton, Toni; White, Chaunté L.; Horn, Catherine L. – Journal of Higher Education, 2023
The purpose of this paper is to document the indirect effects of the Texas Top Ten Percent Plan on professional school degrees awarded and to propose the far reach of the law as an alternative argument in support of race-conscious admissions policies challenged under the strict scrutiny standard. Designed around the two tests of strict scrutiny,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Admission, Admission Criteria, Affirmative Action
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Bloem, Michael D. – Research in Higher Education, 2023
One-third of all post-secondary students transfer colleges and roughly two-thirds of public 4-year colleges require a minimum college GPA to be eligible for transfer admissions. Yet, little is known about how these policies influence who, when, and where students transfer. This paper studies the minimum transfer admissions requirements at…
Descriptors: College Transfer Students, Transfer Policy, Grade Point Average, College Admission
Rachel Burns; Sakshee Chawla; Cate Collins – State Higher Education Executive Officers, 2024
Direct Admissions policies, first pioneered by Idaho in 2015, aim to simplify the path to college for high school students by proactively admitting students to state colleges and universities. Idaho's decision to implement Direct Admissions was motivated by a desire to boost its relatively low college-going rates and ensure that more of its high…
Descriptors: College Admission, Selective Admission, Student Characteristics, Demography
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Sandsør, Astrid Marie Jorde; Hovdhaugen, Elisabeth; Bøckmann, Ester – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2022
This paper uses register data to study how a particular age reward feature affects admission into two highly competitive study programs: medicine and law. The Norwegian admission system to higher education is centralized, and applicants compete in two quotas: one quota almost entirely based on grade point average from upper secondary education and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Admission, Age Differences, Medical Schools
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Espinoza, Oscar; González, Luis Eduardo; Sandoval, Luis; Loyola, Javier; McGinn, Noel; Castillo, Dante – Journal of Marketing for Higher Education, 2022
The objective of this study was to understand which factors contribute most to Psychology and Teaching graduates' satisfaction with their university professional formation. Two factors were assessed: the level of admissions selectivity by the university attended, and the salary received once employed. The participants graduated from three…
Descriptors: College Graduates, College Admission, Selective Admission, Employment Level
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