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Ledman, Robert E.; And Others – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1995
Examined the relationship between career success and the baccalaureate degree origin of women. Analysis of 126 successful women confirm that women's college graduates were more likely to be successful than graduates of coeducational institutions. Results also identify graduate education as a possible intervening variable in the relationship. (GR)
Descriptors: Bachelors Degrees, Coeducation, College Graduates, Comparative Analysis
Lentz, Linda P. – 1982
Differences among college types and among selectivity levels that may affect women's career aspirations were studied. Graduates of six women's colleges and nine coeducational colleges were compared for three levels of admission selectivity in relation to level of the organizational ladder being pursued, innovativeness of chosen career, and plans…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Coeducation, College Admission, College Graduates
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Miller-Bernal, Leslie – American Journal of Education, 1993
Analysis of a panel study of 260 women at 4 colleges (women's college, coordinate of men's college, long-time coeducational college, recently coeducational college) to evaluate why alumnae of women's colleges succeed more than graduates of coeducational colleges. Role models and college activities and their effects on self-esteem are considered.…
Descriptors: Achievement, Coeducation, College Graduates, Comparative Analysis
Bautista, Edna R. – 1993
This paper ranks 155 U.S. Catholic universities and colleges which produced the highest number of students in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s who later earned doctorates, and analyzes various trends for these decades. The study first provides trend information followed by a ranking analysis among single-gender Catholic institutions. Among the facts is…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Bachelors Degrees, Catholic Schools, Church Related Colleges
Kim, Mikyong – 1996
This study investigated the comparative capacity of women-only and co-educational colleges to impact on two dimensions of women students' intellectual development: (1) intellectual self-confidence; and (2) critical thinking and problem-solving skills. The study also attempted to isolate the effect of attending women-only colleges from other…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, College Freshmen, College Graduates, Comparative Analysis