ABSTRACT: Empirical research on the decision to attend college is predicated largely on the assumption that students make conscious, utility-maximizing decisions about their educational careers. For many students this may not be the case; in fact, we find that a large share of students assume from a young age that they will attend college, exhibiting what we call a college-going habitus. Consistent with critical arguments about how social class is reproduced, we find that white, native-born children of college-educated parents are more likely to take college for granted than their less advantaged peers. Students with a college-going habitus are more likely than others to apply to a four-year college by spring of their senior year in high sc...
In an era of heightened educational expectations, it can be difficult to discern why would-be first-...
While trends in college enrollment for blacks and whites have been the subject of study for a number...
While many studies of college choice have focused on whether high schools have a general “college-go...
Research demonstrates that social class shapes where high-achieving students apply to college. Based...
While many studies of college choice have focused on whether high schools have a general “college-go...
While many studies of college choice have focused on whether high schools have a general “college-go...
Research demonstrates that social class shapes where high-achieving students apply to college. Based...
dissertationFirst-generation students have the highest attrition rate of any underrepresented group ...
This dissertation attempts to answer the question "Why do some adolescents pursue college while othe...
High school graduates are seeking access to college in record numbers, and a significant percentage ...
High school graduates are seeking access to college in record numbers, and a significant percentage ...
Higher education is a critical pathway for social mobility in American society, yet social class dis...
Higher education is a critical pathway for social mobility in American society, yet social class dis...
This study aimed to understand how 35 focal students in a No Excuses high school, a charter school m...
This study aimed to understand how 35 focal students in a No Excuses high school, a charter school m...
In an era of heightened educational expectations, it can be difficult to discern why would-be first-...
While trends in college enrollment for blacks and whites have been the subject of study for a number...
While many studies of college choice have focused on whether high schools have a general “college-go...
Research demonstrates that social class shapes where high-achieving students apply to college. Based...
While many studies of college choice have focused on whether high schools have a general “college-go...
While many studies of college choice have focused on whether high schools have a general “college-go...
Research demonstrates that social class shapes where high-achieving students apply to college. Based...
dissertationFirst-generation students have the highest attrition rate of any underrepresented group ...
This dissertation attempts to answer the question "Why do some adolescents pursue college while othe...
High school graduates are seeking access to college in record numbers, and a significant percentage ...
High school graduates are seeking access to college in record numbers, and a significant percentage ...
Higher education is a critical pathway for social mobility in American society, yet social class dis...
Higher education is a critical pathway for social mobility in American society, yet social class dis...
This study aimed to understand how 35 focal students in a No Excuses high school, a charter school m...
This study aimed to understand how 35 focal students in a No Excuses high school, a charter school m...
In an era of heightened educational expectations, it can be difficult to discern why would-be first-...
While trends in college enrollment for blacks and whites have been the subject of study for a number...
While many studies of college choice have focused on whether high schools have a general “college-go...