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Anna Adamecz; Morag Henderson; Nikki Shure – Education Economics, 2024
While it has been shown that university attendance is strongly predicted by parental education, we know very little about why some potential first-generation students make it to university and others do not. This paper looks at the role of non-cognitive skills in the university participation of this disadvantaged group in England. We find that…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Disadvantaged, Foreign Countries, Locus of Control
Henderson, Morag; Shure, Nikki; Adamecz-Völgyi, Anna – Oxford Review of Education, 2020
This paper provides the first quantitative analysis on 'first in family' (FiF) university graduates in the UK. Using a nationally representative dataset that covers a recent cohort in England, we identify the proportion of FiF young people at age 25 as 18%, comprising nearly two-thirds of university graduates. Comparing groups with no parental…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Undergraduate Students, College Graduates, Graduation Rate
Dismore, Harriet – Journal of Education and Work, 2014
It is the intention of the UK government to enhance progression routes for apprentices to higher education. However, little research has been carried out into why former apprentices pursue higher education or the experiences of this transition. This paper seeks to redress this gap by reporting three case studies of former apprentices who had…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Apprenticeships, Higher Education, Case Studies
Spours, Ken; Hodgson, Ann; Brewer, Janet; Barker, Philip – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2009
This article discusses learner progression within further education (FE) colleges in England and the role that both internal college practices and wider system factors play in the transition of 16-19 year olds from school to further study and the workplace. Focusing on a sample of 118 learners from 19 lower level courses in a large general FE…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Mobility, Education Work Relationship, Adult Education

Wolf, Alison; Rapiau, Marie-Therese – Comparative Education, 1993
In France's highly defined educational hierarchy, apprenticeship ranks low and is rejected by the academically successful. In England, educational pathways are less clearly ranked, and apprenticeships are desirable. Reflecting these differences, English craft apprentices scored higher on mathematics tests and showed less occupational variability…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Education Work Relationship, Educational Mobility, Foreign Countries

Brock, Colin – European Journal of Education, 1981
In England and Wales the lack of effective articulation between each adjacent sector of formal education within the public system of education is characteristic. It is seen as likely that deeply ingrained characteristics of dualism, elitism, and extreme localization will prevent real improvement in articulation. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), Educational Mobility, Educational Planning, Foreign Countries

Hargreaves, David H. – Oxford Review of Education, 1996
Argues from a modified libertarian position that diversity and choice in school education are desirable unless some convincing argument and evidence can be shown that the costs greatly outweigh the benefits and any costs incurred cannot be reduced or overcome by limited state intervention. (MJP)
Descriptors: Decision Making, Diversity (Institutional), Educational Finance, Educational Mobility