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Ehrenberg, Ronald G. – Cornell Higher Education Research Institute, 2010
The American higher education system faces tremendous pressure to enhance access and graduation rates. In a period of increasing financial difficulties, how will our nation's higher education institutions achieve these goals and how will they recruit faculty and staff their classes in the future? The answers to these questions, which are the focus…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Tenure, Graduation Rate
Webber, Douglas A.; Ehrenberg, Ronald G. – Cornell Higher Education Research Institute, 2010
Rates of tuition increases in both private and public higher education that continually exceed inflation, coupled with the fact that the United States no longer leads the world in terms of the fraction of young adults who have college degrees, have focused attention on why costs keep increasing in higher education and what categories of higher…
Descriptors: Productivity, Undergraduate Students, Higher Education, Full Time Equivalency
Price, Joshua – Cornell Higher Education Research Institute, 2009
This study examines the effect of an increase in minimum admissions standards on college enrollment and graduation rates of student-athletes. In 1996, the NCAA enacted Proposition 16, which increased the admission standards for freshmen student-athletes at Division I schools in an effort to improve graduation rates. Results indicate that…
Descriptors: African American Students, College Athletics, Graduation Rate, Athletes
Price, Joseph – Cornell Higher Education Research Institute, 2006
Using data on 11,000 graduate students from 100 departments over a 20 year period, I test whether graduate student outcomes (graduation rates, time to degree, publication success, and initial job placement) differ based on a student's gender and marital status. I find that married men have better outcomes across every measure than single men.…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Marital Status, Job Placement, Females
Zhang, Liang – Cornell Higher Education Research Institute, 2006
This study uses panel data to examine the direct link between state funding and graduation rates at four-year public institutions. When other factors are held constant, a $1,000 increase in state appropriations per FTE student at four-year public institutions is associated with about a one percentage point increase in graduation rates. This…
Descriptors: Evidence, Higher Education, Full Time Equivalency, Graduation Rate