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National Center for Education Statistics (DHEW), Washington, DC. – 1979
Details of Fall 1976 enrollment statistics at women's colleges are reported in this bulletin. Among findings were that there were 125 institutions that identified themselves as women's colleges (with a total enrollment of 109,549); 38 percent of the women's colleges were attended exclusively by women (in contrast, 75 percent of men's colleges…
Descriptors: Coeducation, Comparative Analysis, Enrollment Trends, 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
Lentz, Linda P. – 1977
The question of whether women enrolling in women's colleges are more career-oriented than those enrolling in coeducational colleges was investigated. The study was prompted by earlier work concerning the effects of women's colleges on career success. The 1,818 subjects from generally comparable colleges (five women's and nine coeducational)…
Descriptors: Career Planning, Coeducation, College Choice, Colleges
Brown, Marsha D. – 1979
A selected population of 2,430 white, native-born, college freshmen women (under 22 years old) who remained at one institution for four years were studied to determine the effects of institutional and other variables on their career aspirations. Variables selected included background, career plans and self-esteem (after one, four, and five years),…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Aspiration, Career Choice, Coeducation