Match or Mismatch? Automatic Admissions and College Preferences of Low- and High-Income Students
Academic Article
-
- Overview
-
- Research
-
- Identity
-
- Additional Document Info
-
- View All
-
Overview
abstract
-
© 2018 AERA. We examine the role of information in college matching behavior of low- and high-income students, exploiting a state automatic admissions policy that provides some students with perfect a priori certainty of college admissions. We find that admissions certainty encourages college-ready low-income students to seek more rigorous universities. However, low-income students who are less college ready are not influenced by admissions certainty and are more sensitive to college entrance exams scores. Most students also prefer campuses with students of similar demographic and socioeconomic backgrounds. Only highly qualified, low-income students choose institutions where they have fewer same-race and same-income peers. These results suggest that automatic admission policies can reduce income-based inequities in college quality by encouraging low-income students who are highly qualified for college to seek out better matched institutions.
altmetric score
author list (cited authors)
-
Cortes, K. E., & Lincove, J. A.
citation count
complete list of authors
-
Cortes, Kalena E||Lincove, Jane Arnold
publication date
publisher
published in
Research
keywords
-
Academic Undermatching And Overmatching
-
Admission Policies
-
Automatic Admissions
-
Social Matching
-
Texas Top 10% Plan
Identity
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Additional Document Info
start page
end page
volume
issue