探花视频

Academics far more likely to reply to elite university students

Researchers sent emails to authors of recently published papers to test how much prestige matters in access to academic resources

Published on
December 11, 2025
Last updated
December 11, 2025
Computer scientist researching in their laboratory
Source: iStock/gorodenkoff

Academics in China are significantly more likely to respond to students who are studying at elite universities than to those attending more run-of-the-mill institutions, a new study has found.

Researchers Jingjing Zeng of Shenzhen University and聽Xiaoran聽Luo of聽Zhongnan聽University of Economics and Law conducted a six-month experiment to establish whether university prestige influences students鈥 鈥渆quality of access to academic resources鈥 during their studies.

They sent 308 emails to faculty members who had recently published papers in relevant fields.

Each academic received the same enquiry from a fictitious student, with some purporting to be from 鈥渢he top two universities nationwide鈥 and others listing an institution ranked 鈥渁round 200th鈥.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

The differences were stark. Students from the elite universities received 62 replies (40 per cent), compared with 43 replies (28 per cent) for ordinary-university students.

They also received 鈥渟ignificantly higher response rates, faster replies, more detailed feedback, and friendlier responses鈥 and were more likely to receive 鈥渟ubstantive answers and reference materials鈥.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Analysis indicated that students from elite universities had a 69.5 per cent higher email response rate, and were substantially more likely to receive detailed replies, friendly attitudes, substantive answers, reference materials and rapid responses.

The findings, published in the journal , reveal 鈥減ronounced inequality in how teachers allocate academic resources across university tiers鈥.

The authors argue that the structural advantages of elite-university students 鈥渉eighten teachers鈥 attention to this group鈥, while students from ordinary universities 鈥渇ace significant barriers to accessing academic resources鈥.

The research also sheds light on which academics are most likely to prioritise elite-university students. Full professors, the authors found, were more inclined to respond to such students than associate professors or lecturers.

They replied more quickly, more thoroughly, with 鈥渟ubstantive answers鈥 and 鈥渞eference materials鈥 and displayed a 鈥渇riendlier attitude鈥.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Location and institutional status also mattered. Faculty in first-tier cities were 鈥渕ore inclined to allocate academic resources to students from elite universities鈥, a pattern the authors link to competitive pressures and greater volumes of student enquiries.

惭别补苍飞丑颈濒别,听academics at double first-class universities showed 鈥渁 significant positive impact on elite university students鈥 across response rate, detail, attitude and quality.

The paper argues that the roots of these disparities lie in聽China鈥檚 stratified higher education system, in which government policies 鈥渟ystematically channel talent-development opportunities toward key universities鈥.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

This, the authors suggest,聽creates 鈥渄ifferentiated incentives for faculty鈥 and institutionalises a 鈥渟upport-the-best logic鈥, leaving ordinary-university students structurally disadvantaged.

The authors add that inequality in access to academic resources during study may be 鈥渕ore damaging than later labour-market disparities鈥 because it shapes research skills, academic confidence and human-capital accumulation long before graduates face employers.

They warn that such early-stage disadvantages risk 鈥渆ntrenching and exacerbating long-term social inequality鈥.

Reforms are 鈥渦rgently needed鈥, the paper argues. It calls for more equitable funding, cross-institutional sharing of academic activities, online guidance platforms, changes to faculty evaluation systems that incentivise mentoring and revisions to talent-selection policies that currently 鈥減rioritise applicants鈥 research potential and scholarly achievements rather than university pedigree鈥.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Without such structural changes, the authors warn, higher education risks 鈥渨idening the developmental gap between university tiers鈥.

tash.mosheim@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Reader's comments (1)

new
This just tells you academics is a elite endeavour鈥. Its not a nursery school

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT