In light of recent, state-level actions banning racial preference in college admissions decisions, we investigate how whites and minorities differ in their college-going behavior. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, we estimate a sequential model of college attendance and graduation decisions that allows correlations among the errors. Our estimates reveal that minorities are more likely than observationally equivalent whites to attend colleges of all quality levels. Being a minority has a positive effect on graduation probabilities, but, overall, minorities are less likely than their white counterparts to complete college because they possess fewer favorable unobserved factors. © 2002 by the President and Fellows of H...
In the United States today, significant gaps exist among the races along a variety of measures of ac...
In the United States today, significant gaps exist among the races along a variety of measures of ac...
textConcerns with minority perceptions of predominantly white colleges are not new to American coll...
While trends in college enrollment for blacks and whites have been the subject of study for a number...
While trends in college enrollment for blacks and whites have been the subject of study for a number...
The use of race in college admissions is one of the most contentious issues in U.S. higher education...
Emphasizing graduation rate, W. Bowen and D. Bok (1998) argue that "race-sensitive " admis...
Despite growing racial inequality in access to selective colleges, popular beliefs abound that colle...
Despite growing racial inequality in access to selective colleges, popular beliefs abound that colle...
Factors associated with Black and Hispanic students’ low academic achievement and retention in colle...
This paper contributes to our understanding of the benefits of attending selective public colleges i...
This paper uses 10 years of enrollment data at four Texas public universities to examine whether, to...
Institutions of higher education throughout the United States say that they are committed to promoti...
Over the past decade, the number of African American and Hispanic undergraduates enrolled in college...
In the United States today, significant gaps exist among the races along a variety of measures of ac...
In the United States today, significant gaps exist among the races along a variety of measures of ac...
In the United States today, significant gaps exist among the races along a variety of measures of ac...
textConcerns with minority perceptions of predominantly white colleges are not new to American coll...
While trends in college enrollment for blacks and whites have been the subject of study for a number...
While trends in college enrollment for blacks and whites have been the subject of study for a number...
The use of race in college admissions is one of the most contentious issues in U.S. higher education...
Emphasizing graduation rate, W. Bowen and D. Bok (1998) argue that "race-sensitive " admis...
Despite growing racial inequality in access to selective colleges, popular beliefs abound that colle...
Despite growing racial inequality in access to selective colleges, popular beliefs abound that colle...
Factors associated with Black and Hispanic students’ low academic achievement and retention in colle...
This paper contributes to our understanding of the benefits of attending selective public colleges i...
This paper uses 10 years of enrollment data at four Texas public universities to examine whether, to...
Institutions of higher education throughout the United States say that they are committed to promoti...
Over the past decade, the number of African American and Hispanic undergraduates enrolled in college...
In the United States today, significant gaps exist among the races along a variety of measures of ac...
In the United States today, significant gaps exist among the races along a variety of measures of ac...
In the United States today, significant gaps exist among the races along a variety of measures of ac...
textConcerns with minority perceptions of predominantly white colleges are not new to American coll...