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Sarah Cohodes; Astrid Marie Jorde Sandsør; Siv-Elisabeth Skjelbred – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
Admission systems play a critical role in shaping educational opportunities by determining what choices are available to whom. Policy makers and institutions must balance multiple, often conflicting, goals which requires trade-offs between competing values. In this paper, we present core values for admission to higher education alongside a novel…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Admission, Admission Criteria, Admissions Officers
Matt S. Giani; Richard Murphy; Stella M. Flores; Jori Barash; Brian Dixon; Julio Mena Bernal – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
Low-income high-achieving students are less likely than high-income peers to enroll in selective colleges. Financial certainty interventions can address administrative burdens that stifle their enrollment, even when colleges are tuition-free for them. However, we do not know whether these interventions are effective when students enjoy admissions…
Descriptors: High Achievement, Low Income Students, College Admission, Intervention
Vivian Yuen Ting Liu; Veronica Minaya; Di Xu – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Dual enrollment (DE) is one of the fastest growing programs that support the high school-to-college transition. Yet, there is limited empirical evidence about its impact on either students' college application choices or admission outcomes. Using a fuzzy regression discontinuity approach on data from two cohorts of ninth-grade students in one…
Descriptors: Dual Enrollment, College Applicants, School Choice, College Admission
Julie J. Park; Brian Heseung Kim; Nancy Wong; Jia Zheng; Stephanie Breen; Pearl Lo; Dominique J. Baker; Kelly Rosinger; Mike Hoa Nguyen; OiYan Poon – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
For years, discussions on inequality in college admissions have addressed standardized tests, but less is known about inequality in non-standardized components of applications. We analyzed extracurricular activity descriptions in 6,054,104 applications submitted through the Common Application using natural language processing methods. Overall,…
Descriptors: College Applicants, Admission Criteria, College Admission, Portfolios (Background Materials)
Brian McManus; Jessica Howell; Michael Hurwitz – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
The impact of test-optional college admissions policies depends on whether applicants act strategically in disclosing test scores. We analyze individual applicants' standardized test scores and disclosure behavior to 50 major US colleges for entry in fall 2021, when COVID-19 prompted widespread adoption of test-optional policies. Applicants…
Descriptors: Disclosure, Test Results, Scores, College Admission
Brian Heseung Kim; Julie J. Park; Pearl Lo; Dominique Baker; Nancy Wong; Stephanie Breen; Huong Truong; Jia Zheng; Kelly Rosinger; OiYan A. Poon – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Letters of recommendation from school counselors are required to apply to many selective colleges and universities. Still, relatively little is known about how this non-standardized component may affect equity in admissions. We use cutting-edge natural language processing techniques to algorithmically analyze a national dataset of over 600,000…
Descriptors: College Applicants, School Counselors, Equal Education, College Admission
Joshua Hyman – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
Guidance counselors provide the main source of college advising for low-income high school students, but are woefully understaffed in high-need schools. This paper evaluates an approach to school-based college advising that relies on teachers rather than counselors. Using a randomized control trial in sixty-two Michigan high schools, I estimate…
Descriptors: School Counselors, Academic Advising, Faculty Advisers, College Faculty
D'Wayne Bell; John B. Holbein; Samuel Imlay; Jonathan Smith – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
We study how colleges shape their students' voting habits by linking millions of SAT takers to their college-enrollment and voting histories. To begin, we show that the fraction of students from a particular college who vote varies systematically by the college's attributes (e.g. increasing with selectivity) but also that seemingly similar…
Descriptors: Voting, Citizen Participation, Institutional Characteristics, College Applicants
Taylor K. Odle; Preston Magouirk – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
Not all students who could benefit from college apply. With novel data on over 1.2 million high schoolers, we show that nearly 25% start but never complete a college application. We use descriptive techniques, data visualizations, and fixed effects models to explore this population of college-interested "non-submitters" to observe…
Descriptors: College Applicants, Persistence, High School Students, Racial Differences
Sullivan, Zach; Castleman, Ben; Lohner, Gabrielle; Bettinger, Eric – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2021
In-person college advising programs generate large improvements in college persistence and success for low-income students but face numerous barriers to scale. Remote advising models offer a promising strategy to address informational and assistance barriers facing the substantial majority of low-income students who do not have access to…
Descriptors: Academic Advising, College Applicants, Low Income Students, COVID-19
Samantha B. Kane – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
This paper studies the impact of state reproductive rights laws on women's human capital decisions after the U.S. Supreme Court eliminated the constitutional right to abortion in "Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization" (2022). Using data from the Common App, the undergraduate college admission application, I implement a…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, College Applicants, Females, High Achievement
Oded Gurantz; Ann Obadan – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
The absence of federal support leaves undocumented students reliant on state policies to financially support their postsecondary education. We descriptively examine the postsecondary trajectories of tens of thousands of undocumented students newly eligible for California's state aid program, using detailed application data to compare them to…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, College Attendance, Academic Persistence, Educational Finance
Michael D. Bloem; Weixiang Pan; Jonathan Smith – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2021
Using administrative data from Georgia, we provide the first study of the full set of college entrance exam-taking strategies, including who takes the ACT and the SAT (or both), when they take the exams, and how many times they take each exam. We have several main findings. First, one-third of exam takers take both the ACT and SAT. Second, we see…
Descriptors: Test Wiseness, College Entrance Examinations, Disproportionate Representation, Scores
Todd Pugatch; Paul Thompson – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
Can public university honors programs deliver the benefits of selective undergraduate education within otherwise nonselective institutions? We evaluate the impact of admission to the Honors College at Oregon State University, a large nonselective public university. Admission to the Honors College depends heavily on a numerical application score.…
Descriptors: Universities, Honors Curriculum, Undergraduate Study, Selective Admission
Devon L. Graves – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
Every year millions of students seeking access to federal financial aid complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) application which grants an estimated $234 billion in federal aid in the 2020-21 academic year. Upon receiving students' FAFSA, the U.S. Department of Education selects some students for income verification, a…
Descriptors: Critical Race Theory, Hispanic American Students, Student Financial Aid, Community College Students
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