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Wang, Sharron Xuanren; Sakamoto, Arthur – SAGE Open, 2021
Hispanics are the largest minority group in the United States, but quantitative research on the various components of this population has not received extensive investigation. College-educated Hispanics have been particularly neglected due to exaggerated and negative stereotypes. This present study uses data from the 2010 National Survey of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Outcomes of Education, Hispanic Americans, College Graduates
Bichsel, Jacqueline; McChesney, Jasper – College and University Professional Association for Human Resources, 2017
The pay gap between minority men and White men has remained virtually unchanged since 1980, with Hispanic men currently earning 69 cents and Black men currently earning 73 cents on the dollar that White men earn. The pay gap is even greater for minority women. The College and University Professional Association for Human Resources (CUPA-HR) has…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Administration, Administrators, Minority Groups
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John, June Park; Carnoy, Martin – Journal of Education and Work, 2019
We analyse race and gender trends in the Silicon Valley technology industry from 1980 to 2015, with a focus on education, employment and wages in computer science. Racial gaps in representation are more salient among programmers than in the overall technology labour force; in addition, we document a stable or increasing gender gap across all races…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Race, Ethnicity, Geographic Regions
MDC, 2018
In every state in the South, the percentage of residents with bachelor's degrees or higher who were born outside the state exceed the percentage born in-state, reflecting their dependence on imported talent over building their own talent-development systems. In Virginia, the Southern state with the highest percentage of residents with a B.A. or…
Descriptors: Geographic Regions, Demography, Academic Achievement, Income
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Bitzan, John D. – Economics of Education Review, 2009
This study examines the role of sheepskin effects in explaining white-black earnings differences. The study finds significant differences in sheepskin effects between white men and black men, with white men receiving higher rewards for lower level signals (degrees of a college education or less) and black men receiving higher rewards for higher…
Descriptors: Salary Wage Differentials, Rewards, Whites, Males
Wonacott, Michael E. – 2001
A large body of research, especially from the 1990s, demonstrates the positives of Career and Technical Education (CTE). The research shows that associate degree holders enjoyed average earnings 20-30 percent higher than high school graduates (while baccalaureate degree holders had average earnings 30-40 percent higher than those of high-school…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Apprenticeships, Associate Degrees, Bachelors Degrees
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Kim, Jongsung – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2002
Used Current Population Survey Outgoing Rotation Group files to investigate the role of higher education in explaining the earnings gap between Hispanics and Whites. Found that human capital takes precedence over labor market discrimination in explaining the earnings gap. A policy implication is that equal compensation of Hispanic workers is as…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Education Work Relationship, Higher Education, Hispanic Americans
Nettles, Michael T.; Perna, Laura W. – 1995
This study examined the status and conditions of salaries, tenure, rank attainment, and productivity of men and women college faculty and faculty of each of five racial groups. It is based on a subset of data on 8,114 faculty members drawn from the 1992-93 National Study of Postsecondary Faculty. The results, based on descriptive and multivariate…
Descriptors: Academic Rank (Professional), Asian Americans, Blacks, College Faculty
National Center for Education Statistics (ED), Washington, DC. – 1995
Wages and salaries are influenced by many factors, including the employer's perception of the productivity and the availability of workers with different levels of education. They are also affected by economic conditions in the industries that typically employ workers with different levels of education. The ratio of annual earnings of high school…
Descriptors: Blacks, College Graduates, Dropouts, Education Work Relationship
Toutkoushian, Robert K. – 1998
This paper summarizes the key findings of two separate studies of issues pertaining to pay equity for faculty by race and gender. Data were obtained from the 1988 and 1993 National Studies of Postsecondary Faculty, which contain information on 11,013 and 31,354 faculty, respectively. It was found that the unexplained wage gap between men and women…
Descriptors: Blacks, College Faculty, Comparable Worth, Comparative Analysis
Myers, Steven C.; King, Randall H. – 1982
The presence of substantial earnings differentials in the youth labor market provides the motivation for this paper, which considers the financial position of Hispanic youth vis-a-vis non-Hispanic White and Black youth. Two fundamental measures of labor market success--average hourly earnings and salary earnings over a year--are employed as…
Descriptors: Black Youth, Comparative Analysis, Educational Attainment, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Wood, Amy – Southern Changes, 1998
Affirmative action is a necessary and effective strategy to end racial and gender inequalities. While moral and historical defenses of affirmative action have merit, economic reasoning is a more potent argument. Analysis of the economic costs and benefits of affirmative action in higher education illustrate its effectiveness in reducing income…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Blacks, College Graduates, College Outcomes Assessment
Borjas, George, Ed.; Tienda, Marta, Ed. – 1982
Hispanics in the U.S. labor force are the subject of the studies in this volume. After an introduction by George J. Borjas and Marta Tienda, the first three papers focus on the same issue: the determination of wage rates for Hispanics and comparison of Hispanic and non-Hispanic wage rates. Cordelia Reimers compares the situation for Black, White,…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Black Employment, Comparative Analysis, Dropouts
Scott, Elizabeth L. – 1977
The kit is the result of a study undertaken to provide a method for flagging women and minority faculty members whose salaries appear to be low compared to the salaries of white males in the same faculty who have the same attributes and experience. The recommended method also provides an estimate of what the woman's or minority individual's salary…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Comparative Analysis, Costs, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Madden, Janice Fanning – 1977
The study, using a subsample of young men and women from the 1969 National Longitudinal Survey, examined the effects of differences in educational attainment on wages and occupational status by sex and race. In particular, the economic rationale for women's higher rates of high school graduation and lower rates of college attendance and graduation…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Blacks, Educational Benefits, Educational Experience
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