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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 172 results
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Carroll, David; Tani, Massimiliano – Economics of Education Review, 2013
This study investigates the incidence of over-education amongst recent Australian bachelor degree graduates and its effect on their earnings. We find that between 24% and 37% of graduates were over-educated shortly after course completion, with over-education most common amongst young females and least common amongst older females. Over-education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, College Graduates, Salary Wage Differentials
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Singell, Larry D., Jr.; Tang, Hui-Hsuan – Economics of Education Review, 2013
While there is wide agreement that leaders matter, little is known regarding the role that human capital plays in determining who becomes one. We exploit unique attributes of the higher education industry to examine if training and academic ability affect the placement of university presidents within the research hierarchy of U.S. institutions.…
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Human Capital, College Presidents, Resumes (Personal)
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Picchio, Matteo; van Ours, Jan C. – Economics of Education Review, 2013
This paper investigates whether on-the-job training has an effect on the employability of workers. Using data from the Netherlands we disentangle the true effect of training incidence from the spurious one determined by unobserved individual heterogeneity. We also take into account that there might be feedback from shocks in the employment status…
Descriptors: Employment Level, On the Job Training, Foreign Countries, Feedback (Response)
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Yamauchi, Futoshi; Tiongco, Marites – Economics of Education Review, 2013
This paper shows mutually consistent evidence to support female advantage in education and disadvantage in labor markets observed in the Philippines. We set up a model that shows multiple Nash equilibria to explain schooling and labor market behaviors for females and males. Our evidence from unique sibling data of schooling and work history and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employment Patterns, Income, Human Capital
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Carruthers, Celeste K. – Economics of Education Review, 2012
It is widely acknowledged that charter schools tend to have less experienced teachers and higher teacher turnover, but to date, little effort has been made to identify the contribution of faculty experience and retention to overall charter effectiveness. I do so using a twelve-year panel of charter and mainstream student achievement in North…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Middle Schools, Teacher Persistence, Reading Achievement
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Hussey, Andrew – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Panel data on MBA graduates is used in an attempt to empirically distinguish between human capital and signaling models of education. The existence of employment observations prior to MBA enrollment allows for the control of unobserved ability or selection into MBA programs (through the use of individual fixed effects). In addition, variation in…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Business Administration Education, Masters Degrees, College Graduates
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Castello-Climent, Amparo; Hidalgo-Cabrillana, Ana – Economics of Education Review, 2012
We develop a theory of human capital investment to study the effects of school quality on student choices of education, and to understand its effect on economic growth. In a dynamic general equilibrium closed economy, primary education is mandatory but there is an opportunity to continue to secondary education and beyond. High-quality education…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Educational Quality, Economic Development, Outcomes of Education
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Jepsen, Christopher; Montgomery, Mark – Economics of Education Review, 2012
There is a vast literature on the decision to enroll in higher education, but it focuses almost entirely on traditional students: 18 year olds graduating from high school. Yet less than half of students at degree-granting institutions are in the traditional 18-22 age range; nearly 40% are at least 25. This paper examines the enrollment behavior of…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Marital Status, Higher Education, Adults
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Filippin, Antonio; Paccagnella, Marco – Economics of Education Review, 2012
In this paper we analyze the role played by self-confidence, modeled as beliefs about one's ability, in shaping task choices. We propose a model in which fully rational agents exploit all the available information to update their beliefs using Bayes' rule, eventually learning their true type. We show that when the learning process does not…
Descriptors: Achievement Gap, Cognitive Tests, Human Capital, Family Characteristics
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Zeng, Wu; Undurraga, Eduardo A.; Eisenberg, Dan T. A.; Rubio-Jovel, Karla; Reyes-Garcia; Victoria; Godoy, Ricardo – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Evidence from industrial nations suggests that sibling composition is associated with children's educational attainment, particularly if parents face resource constraints. If sibling composition is associated with educational attainment, then those associations should be stronger in poor societies of developing nations. We use data from a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Siblings, American Indians, Economically Disadvantaged
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McGee, Andrew – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Learning disabled youth in the Child and Young Adult samples of the NLSY79 are "more" likely to graduate from high school than peers with the same measured cognitive ability, a difference that cannot be explained by differences in noncognitive skills, families, or school resources. Instead, I find that learning disabled students graduate from high…
Descriptors: Human Capital, High Schools, Learning Disabilities, Graduation
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Breton, Theodore R. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This paper challenges Hanushek and Woessmann's (2008) contention that the quality and not the quantity of schooling determines a nation's rate of economic growth. I first show that their statistical analysis is flawed. I then show that when a nation's average test scores and average schooling attainment are included in a national income model,…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Income, Statistical Significance, Educational Quality
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Dos Santos, Manon Domingues; Wolff, Francois-Charles – Economics of Education Review, 2011
In this paper, we study the impact of parental human capital background on ethnic educational gaps between second-generation immigrants using a large data set conducted in France in 2003. Estimates from censored random effect ordered Probit regressions show that the skills of immigrants explain in the most part, the ethnic educational gap between…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Educational Attainment, Foreign Countries, French
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Dincer, Oguzhan C. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
I investigate the effects of trust on human capital measured as average years of schooling in U.S. states using data from the 1980s and the 1990s. I find robust evidence that an increase in trust increases schooling across U.S. states. According the results of the seemingly unrelated regression estimation, a 25 percentage point increase in "Trust"…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Human Capital, Educational Attainment
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Herbst, Chris M.; Tekin, Erdal – Economics of Education Review, 2011
A child care subsidy is one of the most effective policy instruments to facilitate low-income individuals' transition from welfare to work. Although previous studies consistently find that subsidy receipt is associated with increased employment among single mothers, there is currently no evidence on the influence of these benefits on the decision…
Descriptors: Grants, Child Care, Human Capital, Mothers
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