Quality matters: Assessing the impact of attending more selective institutions on college completion rates of minorities

T Melguizo - Research in Higher education, 2008 - Springer
Research in Higher education, 2008Springer
This paper examines the impact of attending different categories of selective institutions on
students' college completion. Specifically, it explores differences in the impact that selectivity
of an institution has by race and ethnicity. The analysis accounts for the impact of individual
and institutional characteristics and corrects for omitted variables with proxies for student
motivation. The results suggest that students who attend the most selective institutions and
highly selective institutions, as opposed to non-selective ones, are more likely to complete a …
Abstract
This paper examines the impact of attending different categories of selective institutions on students’ college completion. Specifically, it explores differences in the impact that selectivity of an institution has by race and ethnicity. The analysis accounts for the impact of individual and institutional characteristics and corrects for omitted variables with proxies for student motivation. The results suggest that students who attend the most selective institutions and highly selective institutions, as opposed to non-selective ones, are more likely to complete a bachelor’s degree. This result holds for African American and Hispanic students. After correcting for the problem of sorting of students into specific types of institutions, the results of the models suggest that the coefficient of selective institutions might have a small upward bias. The positive effect of selective institutions on attainment suggests that they have the potential to increase the graduation rates of minorities while narrowing the persistent college completion gap.
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