type="main" xml:id="ecin12086-abs-0001"> Access to information may represent an important barrier to learning about and ultimately transferring to 4-year colleges for low-income community college students. This article explores the role that access to information technology, in particular, plays in enhancing, or possibly detracting from, the transfer function of the community college. Using data from the first-ever field experiment randomly providing free computers to students, we examine the relationships between access to home computers and enrollment in transferable courses and actual transfers to 4-year colleges. The results from the field experiment indicate that the treatment group of students receiving free computers has...
Objective: To transfer, students often must navigate complex and imperfect information about credit ...
Increasingly college students are expected to use computers and technology in their studies. This st...
Increased institutional accountability and fiscal constraints coupled with most community college st...
Access to information may represent an important barrier to finding information and ultimately trans...
Access to information may represent an important barrier to learning about and ultimately transferri...
There is no clear theoretical prediction regarding whether home computers are an important input in ...
There is no clear theoretical prediction regarding whether home computers are an important input in ...
This paper provides the first evidence on the earnings, employment and college enrollment effects of...
Are home computers are an important input in the educational production function? To address this qu...
Although research findings to date have documented that computer-mediated communication (CMC) gets s...
While community college transfer students who successfully matriculate into the four-year institutio...
Are home computers are an important input in the educational production function? To address this qu...
The first paper of three uses the nationally representative Education Longitudinal Study of 2002 to ...
Computers are an important part of modern education, yet many schoolchildren lack access to a comput...
The authors find that college students from less educated families are more likely to transfer from ...
Objective: To transfer, students often must navigate complex and imperfect information about credit ...
Increasingly college students are expected to use computers and technology in their studies. This st...
Increased institutional accountability and fiscal constraints coupled with most community college st...
Access to information may represent an important barrier to finding information and ultimately trans...
Access to information may represent an important barrier to learning about and ultimately transferri...
There is no clear theoretical prediction regarding whether home computers are an important input in ...
There is no clear theoretical prediction regarding whether home computers are an important input in ...
This paper provides the first evidence on the earnings, employment and college enrollment effects of...
Are home computers are an important input in the educational production function? To address this qu...
Although research findings to date have documented that computer-mediated communication (CMC) gets s...
While community college transfer students who successfully matriculate into the four-year institutio...
Are home computers are an important input in the educational production function? To address this qu...
The first paper of three uses the nationally representative Education Longitudinal Study of 2002 to ...
Computers are an important part of modern education, yet many schoolchildren lack access to a comput...
The authors find that college students from less educated families are more likely to transfer from ...
Objective: To transfer, students often must navigate complex and imperfect information about credit ...
Increasingly college students are expected to use computers and technology in their studies. This st...
Increased institutional accountability and fiscal constraints coupled with most community college st...