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Baker, David P.; Collins, John M.; Leon, Juan – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2008
Numerous epidemiological studies from the early years of the tragic HIV and AIDS pandemic in sub-Saharan Africa identified formal education as a risk factor increasing the chance of infection. Instead of playing its usual role as a preventative factor, as has been noted in many other public health cases, until the mid-1990s educated African men…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Cohort Analysis, Public Health, Role of Education
Wiseman, Alexander W.; Astiz, M. Fernanda; Baker, David P. – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2014
The rise in globalisation studies in comparative education places neo-institutional theory at the centre of many debates among comparative education researchers. However, uncertainty about how to interpret neo-institutional theory still persists among educational comparativists. With this uncertainty comes misinterpretation of its principles,…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Educational Research, Global Approach, Misconceptions
Peer reviewedBaker, David P.; Goesling, Brian; Letendre, Gerald K. – Comparative Education Review, 2002
Based on 1970s data, the "Heyneman-Loxley (HL) effect" proposed that in developing nations, school variables were more important than family socioeconomic status in determining academic achievement. A reassessment of the HL effect using 1990s TIMSS data found the relationship between family background and student achievement to be similar across…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Developed Nations, Developing Nations, Educational Development
Peer reviewedAstiz, M. Fernanda; Wiseman, Alexander W.; Baker, David P. – Comparative Education Review, 2002
The mingling of economic and institutional globalization forces with existing national education structures produces various paradoxical mixes of decentralized and centralized educational administration. This is demonstrated through brief case studies of education in France, the United States, Colombia, and Spain, and quantitative analysis of data…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Decentralization, Educational Administration, Educational Change
Baker, David P.; Fabrega, Rodrigo; Galindo, Claudia; Mishook, Jacob – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2004
This article examines the influence of instructional time on achievement, particularly from the perspective of national implementation of schooling and national levels of achievement in mathematics. The report is in four sections. The first section provides a brief introduction to the idea of instructional time as a fundamental educational…
Descriptors: Educational Resources, Mathematics Achievement, Academic Achievement, Time Factors (Learning)
Wiseman, Alexander W.; Astiz, M. Fernanda; Fabrega, Rodrigo; Baker, David P. – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2011
Unique cross-national data on adolescents' civic skills, knowledge, and political attitudes are used to examine the democratic processes of modern mass schooling, effects of national political systems, and patterns of youth political socialization in 27 nations. Compared to the generally weak reported effects on mathematics and reading…
Descriptors: Political Socialization, Political Attitudes, Citizenship Education, Reading Achievement
Peer reviewedBaker, David P.; And Others – Comparative Education Review, 1995
Grade-12 results of the Second International Mathematics Study for Belgium, New Zealand, Thailand, and Japan suggest that when single-sex schooling is relatively scarce in a country, it influences student achievement by attracting students with unique characteristics. Achievement effects may be positive or negative depending on the function of…
Descriptors: Coeducation, Comparative Analysis, Context Effect, Educational Environment

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