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Showing 151 to 165 of 1,450 results
Chingos, Matthew M. – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Class-size reduction (CSR) mandates presuppose that resources provided to reduce class size will have a larger impact on student outcomes than resources that districts can spend as they see fit. I estimate the impact of Florida's statewide CSR policy by comparing the deviations from prior achievement trends in districts that were required to…
Descriptors: Evidence, Class Size, Academic Achievement, State Policy
Howard, Larry L. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This paper estimates models of the transitional effects of food insecurity experiences on children's non-cognitive performance in school classrooms using a panel of 4710 elementary students enrolled in 1st, 3rd, and 5th grade (1999-2003). In addition to an extensive set of child and household-level characteristics, we use information on U.S.…
Descriptors: Security (Psychology), Student Behavior, Counties, Classrooms
Andersson, Christian; Johansson, Per; Waldenstrom, Nina – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This study examines how the teaching staff composition with respect to certification affects student achievement in compulsory Swedish schools. We apply an instrumental variable to estimate the effect of the share of non-certified teachers on student achievement (measured by grade point average, "GPA"). We find statistically significant negative…
Descriptors: Municipalities, Grade Point Average, Academic Achievement, Teacher Certification
Meunier, Muriel – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This paper investigates empirically whether immigrant students in Switzerland perform poorly compared to their native counterparts and provides some explanations. Using a national sample of the 2000 PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment) database, we first analyze the impact of immigrant status on pupils' achievement. We find a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scores, Scientific Literacy, Immigrants
Doyle, William R. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Several studies have reported a positive impact of increased academic momentum on transfer from community colleges to four-year institutions. This result may be due to selection bias. Using data from the Beginning Postsecondary Students dataset, I test whether taking more credits in the first year has an impact on transfer rates among bachelor's…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Credits, Higher Education, Sample Size
Lefebvre, Pierre; Merrigan, Philip; Verstraete, Matthieu – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Selection into private schools is the principal cause of bias when estimating the effect of private schooling on academic achievement. By exploiting the generous public subsidizing of private high schools in the province of Quebec, the second most populous province in Canada, we identify the causal impact of attendance in a private high school on…
Descriptors: High Schools, Private Schools, Mathematics Achievement, Academic Achievement
Yamauchi, Futoshi – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This paper examines a range of historical and geographic factors that determine the quality of public school education in post-apartheid South Africa. Empirical analysis shows, first, that population groups are still spatially segregated due to the legacy of apartheid, which implies that, given the positive correlation between school quality and…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, Educational Quality, Correlation, Foreign Countries
McGuinness, Seamus; Sloane, Peter J. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
There is much disagreement in the literature over the extent to which graduates are mismatched in the labour market and the reasons for this. In this paper we utilise the Flexible Professional in the Knowledge Society (REFLEX) data set to cast light on these issues, based on data for UK graduates. We find substantial pay penalties for…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Labor Market, Salary Wage Differentials, Education Work Relationship
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
West, Kristine Lamm; Mykerezi, Elton – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This study examines the impact that collective bargaining has on multiple dimensions of teacher compensation, including average and starting salaries, early and late returns to experience, returns to graduate degrees, and the incidence of different pay for performance schemes. Using data from the School and Staffing Survey (SASS) and a more recent…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Collective Bargaining, Unions, Compensation (Remuneration)
Glocker, Daniela – Economics of Education Review, 2011
In this paper I evaluate the effect of student aid on the success of academic studies. I focus on two dimensions, the duration of study and the probability of actually graduating with a degree. To determine the impact of financial student aid, I estimate a discrete-time duration model allowing for competing risks to account for different exit…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Dropout Rate, Graduation Rate, Graduation
McHenry, Peter – Economics of Education Review, 2011
In this paper, I estimate the effect of state school inputs on labor market returns to schooling. The method follows Card and Krueger (1992) and Heckman et al. (1996), but I extend their analysis in two ways. First, I correct state-level returns to schooling for selective migration, adapting a method from Dahl (2002). Second, I use more recent…
Descriptors: State Schools, Labor Market, Migration, Census Figures
Ronning, Marte – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Using Dutch data on pupils in elementary school this paper is the first empirical study to analyze whether assigning homework has a heterogeneous impact on pupil achievement. Addressing potential biases by using a difference-in-difference approach, I find that the test score gap is larger in classes where everybody gets homework than in classes…
Descriptors: Homework, Scores, Assignments, Elementary Schools
Balsa, Ana I.; Giuliano, Laura M.; French, Michael T. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This paper examines the effects of alcohol use on high school students' quality of learning. We estimate fixed-effects models using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Our primary measure of academic achievement is the student's grade point average (GPA) abstracted from official school transcripts. We find that…
Descriptors: Grade Point Average, Females, Academic Achievement, Drinking
Fethke, Gary – Economics of Education Review, 2011
With an exogenous public subsidy and a break-even restriction on university net revenue, tuition discrimination supports a quasi-efficient departure from marginal-cost pricing. In contrast, when the legislature and university interact in their subsidy and tuition decisions, the public subsidy becomes endogenous. With an endogenous public subsidy,…
Descriptors: Income, Educational Finance, Tuition, Public Colleges

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