A paper co-written by CLS researcher Dr Alice Sullivan, which found that women are less likely to gain a place at Oxford University than men even when they have better grades and are from similar backgrounds, has attracted strong media interest from the Guardian and the BBC.
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A paper co-written by CLS researcher Dr Alice Sullivan, which found that women are less likely to gain a place at Oxford University than men even when they have better grades and are from similar backgrounds, has attracted strong media interest from the Guardian and the BBC.
The research by Dr Sullivan and her co-authors – Anna Zimdars, Manchester University and Anthony Heath, Oxford University – was reported in the Guardian on 19 August 2009 under the headline: ‘Oxford University admissions favour men, study finds’. Dr Sullivan was also interviewed about the research for Radio 4’s Thinking Allowed by Professor Laurie Taylor on the same day (which will be repeated on 24 August and is available via Listen Again).
The main findings from the paper, published in the August issue of Sociology (vol. 43, no. 4, pp. 648–66), are as follows:
Dr Sullivan was quoted in the Guardian as saying: ‘The direct ethnic and gender effects may be due to the overwhelmingly white and 80% male academic staff at Oxford tending to recruit in their own image.’
Ryan Bradshaw
Senior Communications Officer
Phone: 020 7612 6516
Email: r.bradshaw@ucl.ac.uk