2018
DOI: 10.1080/01425692.2018.1434407
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All PhDs are equal but … Institutional and social stratification in access to the doctorate

Abstract: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International licence Newcastle University ePrints -eprint.ncl.ac.uk

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Cited by 30 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Consequently, the fifty-six existing universities in Chile are not only differentiated by their institutional mission, accreditation, and their public and private nature, but also by the sociodemographic profile of their students (Muñoz & Blanco, 2013). Like the Ivy League universities in the USA (Mullen, 2009) and the Oxbridge and Russell Group in the UK (Pásztor & Wakeling, 2018), a handful of prestigious universities are primarily populated with students who attended private selective high schools.…”
Section: The Classism Nature Of the Educational System From Earliest ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, the fifty-six existing universities in Chile are not only differentiated by their institutional mission, accreditation, and their public and private nature, but also by the sociodemographic profile of their students (Muñoz & Blanco, 2013). Like the Ivy League universities in the USA (Mullen, 2009) and the Oxbridge and Russell Group in the UK (Pásztor & Wakeling, 2018), a handful of prestigious universities are primarily populated with students who attended private selective high schools.…”
Section: The Classism Nature Of the Educational System From Earliest ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This lack of a Black presence in student bodies at the 'top' universities has significant knock-on effects, through doctoral study and into academia, not least because, firstly, students tend to stay in their university type (elite/nonelite) as they progress past undergraduate level (Pásztor and Wakeling, 2018). In other words, if they do not enter a high-status university from the outset, they are unlikely to undertake doctoral studies there -assuming they are able to score well enough and stay on the course.…”
Section: Top (White) Universitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A key challenge to postgraduate admissions reform is the difficulty of defining widening participation at postgraduate level, beyond the broad principle of equal opportunities to pursue research, regardless of social background, or first university (Pásztor and Wakeling 2018). Beyond postcodes or parental income, the relevant 'contexts' at PGR level include the very different academic opportunities offered to undergraduates by their universities.…”
Section: Pushing For Change In Postgraduate Admissions and Supportmentioning
confidence: 99%