Changes in the Process of
College Choice among Men and Women: The Role of Two-Year Colleges
Jennifer Flashman (UCLA)
ABSTRACT
Rising average levels of educational attainment, a shift
from the predominance of men to the predominance of women
among college students, and the growing importance of
two-year colleges are important sources of change in the
process of college attendance and graduation over the past
30 years. This paper extends previous models of college
choice by (1) examining changes in selection into college on
measured determinants of attendance and graduation over the
high school classes of 1972, 1982, and 1992; (2) documenting
how patterns and trends in selection into college differ
between men and women; and (3) incorporating two-year
college attendance and transfers between two and four year
college into the model. It investigates the hypothesis that
selection into college changed largely through changes in
the prevalence of two-year colleges and other
non-traditional routes to college completion. Investigating
these alternative paths illuminates gender differences in
the process of college choice.