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Lin, Yangjing; Vogt, W. Paul – Journal of Higher Education, 1996
Analysis of data from the National Longitudinal Study High School Class of 1972 found that having a two-year college education culminating in a degree or certificate (as compared to entering the labor market with no postsecondary education) improved individuals' occupational outcomes (income and/or job status), but left patterns of inequality…
Descriptors: Associate Degrees, College Outcomes Assessment, Community Colleges, Educational Benefits
Altonji, Joseph G. – 1990
A prototype model was developed to estimate the effect of various variables on the internal rate of return to starting college. The model arose out of observations that there is a nonlinear relationship between education and earnings, that many students who begin college never finish, that there are large differences across fields of…
Descriptors: Blacks, College Outcomes Assessment, College Role, Educational Economics
Adelman, Clifford – 1999
This report uses data from the National Longitudinal Study of the High School Class of 1972 and the High School & Beyond/Sophomores Study to summarize information on what is studied, where, and by whom, in the nation's colleges, community colleges, and postsecondary trade schools. Section 1 describes how the data is based on that which the…
Descriptors: Classification, College Outcomes Assessment, Colleges, Community Colleges
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Riordan, Cornelius – Journal of Higher Education, 1994
A study using data from the National Longitudinal Study of the High School Class of 1972 compared effects of attendance at a women's college for one to six years (n=125) with attendance at only coeducational colleges (n=1832). Findings indicated significant occupational achievement benefits were realized for each year of attendance at a women's…
Descriptors: Attendance Patterns, Career Choice, Coeducation, College Outcomes Assessment