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The determinants of undergraduate degree performance: how important is gender?
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 20:12 authored by Michael Barrow, Barry Reilly, Ruth WoodfieldThis study uses data drawn from three recent cohorts of undergraduates at the University of Sussex to investigate the key determinants of degree performance. The primary theme of the study is an examination of the gender dimension to degree performance. The average 'good' degree rate for female students was found to be superior to the male rate. The modest raw gender differential in first class degree rates favoured women but was found to be attributable to their better endowments, particularly pre-entry qualifications. The largest differential favouring women was in the II:i classification, where almost all of the difference was attributable to differentials in coefficient treatment rather than endowments (or characteristics). The analysis undertaken also allowed the investigation of a number of sub-themes relating to the effects on degree performance of, inter alia, pre-entry qualifications, ethnicity, socio-economic background and health disability. The largest effects were reserved for the role of pre-entry qualifications with more modest effects detected for ethnicity and socio-economic backgroun
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
British Educational Research JournalISSN
0141-1926External DOI
Issue
4Volume
35Page range
575-597Pages
23.0Department affiliated with
- Economics Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes