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Shi, Ying – Grantee Submission, 2018
This paper uses administrative North Carolina data linked from high school to college and national surveys to characterize the largest contributor to the STEM gender gap: engineering. Disparities are the result of differential entry during high school or earlier rather than postsecondary exit. Differences in pre-college academic preparation…
Descriptors: Females, Engineering, Professional Personnel, Gender Differences
Westrick, Paul – ACT, Inc., 2016
Using date from 120,612 students at 26 four-year institutions, this report provides a description of STEM majors entering four-year postsecondary institutions and those who persist through four years of study. The results indicate that persisting STEM majors enter college with very high levels of pre-college academic achievement as measured by the…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Majors (Students), Academic Persistence, College Students
White, Bradford R.; DeAngelis, Karen J.; Lichtenberger, Eric J. – Illinois Education Research Council, 2013
This study uses a unique, longitudinal statewide database to track students through the new teacher supply pipeline from high school through college and initial teacher certification. The report examines how each stage influences the characteristics of those who enter the teaching profession, with particular attention to academic skills and…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Teacher Supply and Demand, Elementary Secondary Education, High School Students
ABE, CLIFFORD; AND OTHERS – 1965
THE AMERICAN COLLEGE SURVEY WAS ADMINISTERED TO 12,432 COLLEGE FRESHMEN AT 31 DIFFERENT INSTITUTIONS TO OBTAIN A MORE COMPLETE PICTURE OF THE TYPICAL COLLEGE STUDENT AND THE VARIATION AMONG STUDENTS FROM COLLEGE TO COLLEGE. THE AMERICAN COLLEGE SURVEY CONTAINS 45 SCALES WHICH CAN BE SCORED TO ASSESS STUDENT INTERESTS, POTENTIAL FOR VARIOUS…
Descriptors: Achievement, Aspiration, Career Choice, College Students
Moughamian, Henry; And Others – 1971
A student's age, sex, aspiration, and ability were related to successful performance (50th percentile or higher) on the College Level Examination Program (CLEP) general examinations. Previous college credits and attendance status, as measured, did not seem to be important factors. Of the variables investigated, ability, as measured by the American…
Descriptors: Ability, Academic Aspiration, Age, College Credits