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Martin Hensley – ProQuest LLC, 2020
This study seeks to investigate curricular trends in MOOCs and institutional participation in the development of MOOC courses. The study is framed utilizing the theoretical lenses of academic capitalism and isomorphism--particularly Riesman's conceptualization of a "snake-like procession" of isomorphism in American higher education lead…
Descriptors: MOOCs, Course Content, Curriculum Development, Institutional Role
Honey, Ngaire; Carrasco, Alejandro – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2023
Chile is known for universal school choice policies and a high level of economic segregation. In part, segregation has been linked to selective school admission policies. Chile implemented a centralized school admission system (New School Admission System), where PK-12 schools must accept any applicant, and lottery assignment is used for…
Descriptors: School Choice, Low Income Students, Admission Criteria, Access to Education
Jennifer L. Steele – Education Economics, 2024
The question of why postsecondary institutions produce different labor market outcomes is difficult to answer due to unobserved student characteristics. Here, I leverage students' geographic proximity to three classifications of postsecondary institutions -- earnings-enhancing, competitive, and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Black Colleges, Selective Admission, Institutional Characteristics
Elmgren, Heidi – International Journal of Music Education, 2019
In this article I analyse merit-based exclusion in Finnish music schools for children and young people. I base my study on my earlier research on meritocracy and written data collected online from current and former music school students in the autumn and winter of 2015-2016. I am able to show there are implicit and explicit merit-based…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Music Education, Merit Rating, Schools
Bulle, Nathalie – School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 2019
The research brought forward examines the evolution of the selective social processes that have accompanied educational expansion over the long term, referring to the case of France. It is based on an original index which addresses the issue of assessing inequality within the selection process for access to various educational levels. The results…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Selective Admission, Access to Education
Mathur, Ambika; Cano, Annmarie; Dickson, Marcus W.; Matherly, Larry H.; Maun, Caroline; Neale, Anne Victoria – Strategic Enrollment Management Quarterly, 2019
The graduate enrollment management (GEM) landscape is rapidly changing as faculty and administrators recognize biases that may affect the graduate admissions process. At the same time, there is growing recognition and increased effort to advance inclusive excellence in higher education. Much of this work has been done at the undergraduate level…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, College Admission, Enrollment Management, Portfolio Assessment
Wheeler, Greg – International Journal for Educational Integrity, 2018
The recent scandal involving Tokyo Medical University's practice of restricting the number of incoming students, primarily female, by systematically lowering their entrance exam scores has once again shone a spotlight on the issue of gender discrimination in Japan. The bulk of the media coverage to date has centered on the manner in which the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Medical Schools, Gender Discrimination, Selective Admission
Warshaw, Jarrett B.; McNaughtan, Jon; DeMonbrun, Matt – Higher Education Policy, 2021
Conventional wisdom suggests that a field of striving compels US public master's institutions (PMIs) to pursue prestige in the academic hierarchy. We posit that, due to their unique histories of democratizing college opportunity, PMIs face conflicting imperatives from two fields: an origin one of equity and another of striving. Our hypotheses are…
Descriptors: Universities, Public Colleges, Masters Programs, Graduate Study
Farini, Federico; Scollan, Angela Marie – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2021
This article discusses a Transition Programme to support the inclusion of mature students in Higher Education. The Transition Programme was designed and it is currently provided by a Higher Education institution in Surrey, South-East of England. An outcome of innovative educational leadership, the Transition Programme' successfully solved the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nontraditional Students, Adult Students, Higher Education
Jia, Ruixue; Li, Hongbin – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2021
A burgeoning literature has documented the importance of elite colleges. Yet, little is known about access to elite education and its labor market implications in China, a country that produces one in every five college graduates in the world. College admission in China is governed by a single exam--the national college entrance exam, and the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Colleges, Selective Admission, College Admission
Sutton Trust, 2021
This Sutton Trust summary accompanies the report "Which University Degrees Are Best for Intergenerational Mobility?," produced by the Institute for Fiscal Studies in partnership with the Sutton Trust and the Department for Education. The research is a landmark piece of work for the study of social mobility in this country, utilising data…
Descriptors: Universities, Social Mobility, Academic Degrees, Higher Education
Wilson, Jeffery L. – Journal of Comparative and International Higher Education, 2022
In this paper, an understanding of how an elite institution pursues diversity initiatives is explored. Research afforded a better understanding of strategies adopted for recruitment and retention whereby positive results were reported after implementation. Removing barriers that may prevent marginalized populations from enrolling were critical…
Descriptors: Student Recruitment, Student Diversity, Barriers, Disadvantaged
Yang Hansen, Kajsa; Radišic, Jeléna; Ding, Yi; Liu, Xin – Large-scale Assessments in Education, 2022
Background: The current study investigates school contextual effects on students' academic self-concept and achievement, that is, peer socioeconomic effect and big-fish-little-pond effect (BFLPE), in four Nordic education systems (i.e., Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden) and selected Chinese education systems (Hong Kong and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academic Achievement, Student Attitudes, Self Concept
Howard, Adam; Pine, Jamie; Muench, Weston; Peck, Sarah – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2020
The ways in which elite schools in Chile reproduce power and privilege within the nation's highly inequitable schooling system are largely ignored by researchers and the general public. In this article, the authors address this gap by identifying and exploring the primary class strategies that an elite school employs to secure their elite status.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Selective Admission, Power Structure, Social Stratification
Brantlinger, Andrew – Urban Education, 2020
This article presents a critique of a teacher quality agenda promoted by a network of elitiste organizations in the United States. Network leaders posit that gaps in teacher quality cause achievement gaps. Their solution is to incentivize the graduates of the nation's most selective colleges to teach in hard-to-staff schools. Summarizing prior…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, College Graduates, Colleges, Selective Admission