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Showing 1 to 15 of 55 results Save | Export
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Heeyun Kim – Research in Higher Education, 2024
The worldwide adoption of holistic admissions in higher education is a recent phenomenon, inspired by elements originally present in the U.S. system. While holistic admissions have been rooted in the Korean higher education system since its adoption, now it is also faced with burgeoning debates over their fairness and impact on student access.…
Descriptors: Holistic Approach, Foreign Countries, College Admission, Access to Education
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Curran, F. Chris – Research in Higher Education, 2022
For the past decade and a half, many institutions of higher education have asked about high school disciplinary experiences, including suspensions, on their applications. Advocates have argued that this "discipline box" has a negative effect on suspended students' likelihood to apply and be accepted to institutions of higher education…
Descriptors: College Applicants, Discipline, Suspension, College Admission
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Manuel S. González Canché; Kaiwen Zheng; Yantao Song; Yunhao Liang – Research in Higher Education, 2025
Despite the emergence of test-optional policies, standardized admission tests continue shaping the college composition and financial aid prospects of hundreds of thousands of students. This is concerning for the following reasons: (a) standardized test results have historically favored test-takers from wealthier and majority backgrounds, (b) test…
Descriptors: Standardized Tests, Talent Identification, Geographic Location, Test Bias
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Odle, Taylor K.; Delaney, Jennifer A. – Research in Higher Education, 2022
In 2015, Idaho adopted the nation's first direct admissions system and proactively admitted all high school graduates to a set of public institutions. This reimagination of the admissions process may reduce barriers to students' enrollment and improve access across geographic and socioeconomic contexts by removing many human capital,…
Descriptors: College Admission, High School Graduates, Enrollment, Barriers
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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
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Paris, Joseph H.; Beckowski, Catherine Pressimone; Fiorot, Sara – Research in Higher Education, 2023
Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, an unprecedented number of higher education institutions adopted test-optional admissions policies. The proliferation of these policies and the criticism of standardized admissions tests as unreliable predictors of applicants' postsecondary educational promise have prompted the reimagining of evaluative methodologies in…
Descriptors: Predictive Validity, Measures (Individuals), College Admission, College Entrance Examinations
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Holzman, Brian; Klasik, Daniel; Baker, Rachel – Research in Higher Education, 2020
A large literature in higher education research has focused on disparities in rates of successful completion of the various steps along the path that leads to college enrollment (e.g. completing a college preparatory curriculum, taking the SAT or ACT, applying to a college) as an important source of inequitable college attainment between groups of…
Descriptors: College Admission, Equal Education, Educational Attainment, Longitudinal Studies
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Johnson, Iryna Y. – Research in Higher Education, 2019
In recent years many public colleges have attempted to attract and enroll high-achieving and diverse out-of-state students. Understanding why admitted out-of-state students choose to accept or decline their offers of admission has become an important part of these institutions' efforts to achieve their enrollment goals. In this study, out-of-state…
Descriptors: Out of State Students, College Admission, College Choice, Public Colleges
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Fosnacht, Kevin; Copridge, Keeley; Sarraf, Shimon A. – Research in Higher Education, 2019
College admissions leaders increasingly desire to incorporate non-cognitive factors like grit into admissions decisions. Consequently, we examined the validity of the short grit scale (Grit-S) using data collected on undergraduates attending 38 colleges. Using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), we found that Grit-S does not possess adequate model…
Descriptors: College Admission, Admissions Officers, Persistence, Resilience (Psychology)
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Bennett, Christopher; Evans, Brent; Marsicano, Christopher – Research in Higher Education, 2021
In recent decades, several dozen colleges and universities have instituted loan-reduction initiatives (LRIs), such as "no-loan" programs. Institutions frequently cast such initiatives as efforts to increase socioeconomic diversity on campus. Using a difference-in-differences analytic strategy with national institution-level data, we…
Descriptors: Loan Repayment, Federal Aid, Grants, Student Loan Programs
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Barnhardt, Cassie L.; Young, Ryan L.; Sheets, Jessica K. E.; Phillips, Carson W.; Parker, Eugene T., III; Reyes, Kimberly – Research in Higher Education, 2017
Using a census sampling, this analysis evaluates the campus structures and practices that are predictive of a campus being affiliated with stakeholder legal advocacy regarding the Fisher Supreme Court affirmative action case of 2013. Findings reveal that a campus utilizing selective admissions operated as a sufficient, but not a necessary,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Stakeholders, College Admission, Selective Admission
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Fitzpatrick, Dan – Research in Higher Education, 2020
Low-income and racial minority students access college at lower rates than their more-advantaged peers, caused in part by lesser social capital. Low socio-economic status (SES) students' networks of rarely provide help navigating the application and enrollment process, preventing even academically-capable students from competing in the…
Descriptors: Social Capital, Academic Advising, School Counselors, Secondary Schools
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Bowman, Nicholas A.; Bastedo, Michael N. – Research in Higher Education, 2018
Attending a selective college or university has a notable impact on the likelihood of graduation, graduate school attendance, social networks, and career earnings. Given these short-term and long-term benefits, surprisingly little research has directly explored the factors that might promote or detract from equitable admissions decisions at these…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Admissions Officers, College Admission, Access to Education
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Conger, Dylan; Dickson, Lisa – Research in Higher Education, 2017
University administrators often strive for racial, socioeconomic, and geographic diversity in their student populations. Today, administrators face a new demographic challenge as women increasingly outnumber men in applications, enrollments, and graduation rates. This article discusses the causes and potential consequences of the growing gender…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Admission, Admission Criteria, Gender Differences
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Trolian, Teniell L.; Jach, Elizabeth A.; Ogren, Christine A.; Hanson, Jana M. – Research in Higher Education, 2018
This study considers how institutional histories of admitting women are associated with present college experiences, and uses data from the Wabash National Study of Liberal Arts Education to compare the experiences of women at women's colleges or former women's colleges to those of women at former men's colleges and colleges that have always been…
Descriptors: Womens Education, College Admission, Student Experience, Institutional Characteristics
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