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Showing 1 to 15 of 82 results Save | Export
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Anthony Abraham Jack; Becca Spindel Bassett – Sociology of Education, 2024
Although undergraduates from all class backgrounds work while attending college, little is known about how students approach finding work and the benefits they reap from different on-campus roles. Drawing on interviews with 110 undergraduates at Harvard University, we show that in the absence of clear institutional expectations surrounding…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Employment, Socioeconomic Background, Employment Opportunities
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Andrew Brantlinger; Ashley Anne Grant – Sociology of Education, 2024
This article investigates the understudied relationship between teacher socioeconomic status (SES) and retention. Drawing on Bourdieu's theory of social reproduction and longitudinal data from 378 mathematics teachers, we use logistic regression to examine whether teacher SES, conceptualized and measured in terms of their economic, social, and…
Descriptors: Teacher Characteristics, Socioeconomic Status, Teacher Persistence, Social Capital
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Pearman, Francis A., II; Marie Greene, Danielle – Sociology of Education, 2022
Largely overlooked in the empirical literature on gentrification are the potential effects school closures have in the process. This study begins to fill this gap by integrating longitudinal data on all U.S. metropolitan neighborhoods from the Neighborhood Change Database with data on the universe of school closures from the National Center for…
Descriptors: School Closing, Disadvantaged, Social Class, Land Acquisition
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In, Jung; Breen, Richard – Sociology of Education, 2023
U.S. studies have found that stratified graduate education accounts for most of the relatively strong intergenerational socioeconomic association among postgraduate degree holders. The same association has been observed, but not explained, in countries with higher education systems that differ from that of the United States. We explore the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Study, Graduate Study, College Graduates
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Mbekeani, Preeya Pandya – Sociology of Education, 2023
There has been widespread concern about widening disparities in parental investments that may be associated with widening gaps in educational attainment. Using data from the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 and the Education Longitudinal Study of 2002, this study examines parents' investments and engagement in the college-going…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, High School Graduates, Parent Participation, Paying for College
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Allison L. Hurst; Vincent J. Roscigno; Anthony Abraham Jack; Monica McDermott; Deborah M. Warnock; José A. Muñoz; Wendi Johnson; Elizabeth M. Lee; Colby R. King; David Brady; Robert D. Francis; Kevin J. Delaney; Margaret Weigers Vitullo – Sociology of Education, 2024
Sociological research has long been interested in inequalities generated by and within educational institutions. Although relatively rich as a literature, less analytic focus has centered on educational mobility and inequality experiences within graduate training specifically. In this article, we draw on a combination of survey and open-ended…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, First Generation College Students, Working Class, Sociology
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Haber, Jaren R. – Sociology of Education, 2021
Research shows charter schools are more segregated by race and class than are traditional public schools. I investigate an underexamined mechanism for this segregation: Charter schools project identities corresponding to parents' race- and class-specific parenting styles and educational values. I use computational text analysis to detect the…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, School Segregation, Race, Social Class
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Ivemark, Biörn; Ambrose, Anna – Sociology of Education, 2021
In recent years, research has brought attention to the heterogeneity of resources that first-generation students bring with them to higher education and the factors that assist in these students' social and academic adjustment to university life. However, few studies have focused on how these students' early socialization and experiences over the…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Student Adjustment, Higher Education, Student Attitudes
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Riegle-Crumb, Catherine; Peng, Menglu – Sociology of Education, 2021
Utilizing the High School Longitudinal Study, a nationally representative sample of U.S. high school students, this study investigates the factors that predict different beliefs about gendered math ability and the potential consequences for students' choices to enter gender-segregated science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) majors…
Descriptors: High School Students, Adolescents, Beliefs, Gender Issues
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Kosyakova, Yuliya; Gerber, Theodore P. – Sociology of Education, 2019
Adult education influences how labor market opportunities are structured in the later life course. We propose a theoretical framework for understanding the stratifying role of adult education resting on the distinction between two forms of adult education--upgrading and sidestepping: Resources, incentives, and selection processes systematically…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adult Education, Educational History, Educational Change
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Brown, Bailey A. – Sociology of Education, 2022
Expanded school-choice policies have weakened the traditional link between residence and school assignment. These policies have created new school options and new labor for families to manage and divide. Drawing on interviews with 90 mothers and 12 fathers of elementary-age children, I demonstrate that mothers across class, racial, and ethnic…
Descriptors: School Choice, Mothers, Fathers, Decision Making
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Lee, Elizabeth M. – Sociology of Education, 2017
This article examines class as a potential source of stigma faculty members from low-socioeconomic-status (low-SES) backgrounds. Based on 47 interviews with demographically diverse respondents at a wide range of institutions, the article examines respondents' narratives of direct and indirect stigmatization around class as well as respondents'…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Background, Low Income Groups, Socioeconomic Background
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Binder, Amy J.; Abel, Andrea R. – Sociology of Education, 2019
The study of elites is enjoying a revival at a time of increasing economic inequality. Sociologists of education have been leaders in this area, researching how affluent families position their children to compete favorably in a highly stratified higher education system. However, scholars have done less research on how students do symbolic work of…
Descriptors: Selective Admission, Liberal Arts, Undergraduate Students, Social Status
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Candipan, Jennifer – Sociology of Education, 2020
School choice expansion in recent decades has weakened the strong link between neighborhoods and schools created under a strict residence-based school assignment system, decoupling residential and school enrollment decisions for some families. Recent work suggests that the neighborhood-school link is weakening the most in neighborhoods…
Descriptors: School Choice, Neighborhoods, Social Class, Disadvantaged
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Zarifa, David; Kim, Jeannie; Seward, Brad; Walters, David – Sociology of Education, 2018
Despite improved access in expanded postsecondary systems, the great majority of bachelor's degree graduates are taking considerably longer than the allotted four years to complete their four-year degrees. Taking longer to finish one's BA has become so pervasive in the United States that it has become the norm for official statistics released by…
Descriptors: Time to Degree, Social Class, Bachelors Degrees, College Graduates
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