College-major choice to college-then-major choice: Experimental evidence from Chinese college admissions reforms

Liping Ma, Xin Li, Qiong Zhu, Xiaoyang Ye

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Abstract

One of the most important mechanism design policies in college admissions is to let students choose a college major sequentially (college-then-major choice) or jointly (college-major choice). In the context of the Chinese meta-major reforms that transition from college-major choice to college-then-major choice, we provide the first experimental evidence on the information frictions and heterogeneous preferences that students have in their response to the meta-major option. In a randomized experiment with a nationwide sample of 11,424 high school graduates, we find that providing information on the benefits of a meta-major significantly increased students’ willingness to choose the meta-major; however, information about specific majors and assignment mechanisms did not affect students major choice preferences. We also find that information provision mostly affected the preferences of students who were from disadvantaged backgrounds, lacked accurate information, did not have clear major preferences, or were risk loving.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102380
JournalEconomics of Education Review
Volume94
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2023

Keywords

  • Behavioral economics
  • College major choice
  • Information friction
  • Randomized experiment

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