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Showing 166 to 180 of 1,858 results
Hanushek, Eric A. – Education Economics, 2009
Concentration on school attainment goals without close attention to school quality has hurt developing countries. Recent evidence shows that individual incomes, the distribution of income, and economic growth rates are all closely related to the cognitive skills of the population. While direct evidence from developing countries is thin, the…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Human Capital, Teacher Effectiveness, Foreign Countries
Westerlund, Joakim – Education Economics, 2008
This paper examines the effect of class size on student evaluations of the quality of an introductory mathematics course at Lund University in Sweden. In contrast to much other studies, we find a large negative, and statistically significant, effect of class size on the quality of the course. This result appears to be quite robust, as almost all…
Descriptors: Class Size, Student Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Introductory Courses
Lassibille, Gerard; Gomez, Lucia Navarro – Education Economics, 2008
This paper seeks to advance our understanding of the drop-out behavior of students in higher education. Our results are based on longitudinal data for 7000 students who embarked on short and long programs from one university in Spain and who were observed over an eight-year period ending in 2004. The statistical analysis is carried out in a…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Family Characteristics, Foreign Countries, Statistical Analysis
Haile, Getinet Astatike; Nguyen, Anh Ngoc – Education Economics, 2008
We investigate the determinants of high school students' academic attainment in mathematics, reading and science in the United States; focusing particularly on possible differential impacts of ethnicity and family background across the distribution of test scores. Using data from the NELS2000 and employing quantile regression, we find two…
Descriptors: Ethnic Groups, Family Characteristics, Academic Achievement, Tests
Lien, Donald – Education Economics, 2008
The number of colleges and universities in most developing countries has increased drastically over the past decades. The quality variation of these institutions is an alarming concern. Quality assurance programs are proposed and implemented. This paper evaluates the effects of quality assurance on the demand for college education, study abroad,…
Descriptors: Quality Control, Educational Demand, Brain Drain, Study Abroad
Rammohan, Anu; Dancer, Diane – Education Economics, 2008
In this paper we examine the influence of gender, sibling characteristics and birth order on the schooling attainment of school-age Egyptian children. We use multivariate analysis to simultaneously examine three different schooling outcomes of a child having "no schooling", "less than the desired level of schooling", and an "age-appropriate level…
Descriptors: Siblings, Birth Order, Multivariate Analysis, Gender Differences
Cater, Bruce; Lew, Byron; Smith, Barry – Education Economics, 2008
This paper offers an explanation of the use of tenure-track contracts in academia. It argues that, because the results of academic research cannot be sold, a professor's profitability depends on the market value of the instruction he or she provides. But because that value depends directly on the extent of his or her observable research…
Descriptors: Tenure, Endowment Funds, College Faculty, Teacher Researchers
Lien, Donald – Education Economics, 2008
This paper considers the effects of a branch campus on the individual college education decision and the economic welfare of a developing country. There are a single domestic college and a single branch campus established by a foreign university. A graduate from the branch campus has an opportunity to emigrate and work abroad, earning a higher…
Descriptors: Economic Research, Overseas Employment, Multicampus Colleges, Brain Drain
Easton, Stephen T.; Rockerbie, Duane W. – Education Economics, 2008
This paper develops a simple static model of an imperfectly competitive university operating under government-imposed constraints on the ability to raise tuition fees and increase enrollments. The model has particular applicability to Canadian universities. Assuming an average cost pricing rule, rules for adequate government subsidies (operating…
Descriptors: Universities, Grants, Tuition, Educational Finance
Reyes, Jessica Wolpaw – Education Economics, 2008
The college financial aid system imposes an implicit asset tax that is prevalent and substantial. Facing this tax, rational families should reduce their total assets and shelter assets in protected categories. I find that the tax induces a 7-12% reduction in total assets, a result in line with the literature. Furthermore, I find evidence that…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Economics, Need Analysis (Student Financial Aid), Paying for College
Bosworth, Derek; Jones, Paul; Wilson, Rob – Education Economics, 2008
Globalization is putting increasing pressure on jobs in the United Kingdom, particularly among less skilled activities. The European response through the Lisbon Strategy has been diffuse, while UK policy appears much more focused, concentrating on the need to raise education and skill levels. The present paper examines the transition towards a…
Descriptors: Employment Qualifications, Global Approach, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy
Norberg-Schonfeldt, Magdalena – Education Economics, 2008
Data from Statistics Sweden on 70 000 students entering upper secondary school in 1994 are used along with socioeconomic characteristics from the 1990 census to explore the relationship between market work by parents in Sweden and their children's educational achievement, measured as the Grade Point Average. The results show that there is a…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Grade Point Average, Academic Achievement, Labor Market
Adkisson, Richard V.; Peach, James T. – Education Economics, 2008
Universities around the United States are seeking ways to attract students to their institutions. One possible strategy is to compete for out-of-state students. Since an early 1970s examination of the determinants of student migration by Tuckman, there have been several subsequent studies that have either further developed the methodology of the…
Descriptors: Out of State Students, Land Grant Universities, Black Colleges, Migration
Kingdon, Geeta Gandhi; Theopold, Nicolas – Education Economics, 2008
While it might be expected that demand for schooling will depend positively on the economic returns to education (ER) in the local labor market, in fact there is theoretical ambiguity about the sign of the schooling-ER relationship when households are liquidity-constrained. Whether the relationship is positive or negative depends on which effect…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Attainment, Education Work Relationship
Borooah, Vani K.; Mangan, John – Education Economics, 2008
Students in many countries face increased costs of education in the form of direct payments and future tax liabilities and, as a consequence, their education decisions have taken on a greater financial dimension. This has refocused attention on obtaining meaningful estimates of the return to education. Routinely these returns are estimated as the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Unemployment, Outcomes of Education, Educational Attainment

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