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Showing 16 to 30 of 1,858 results
Belot, Michèle; Vandenberghe, Vincent – Education Economics, 2014
Like active labour market programmes, grade repetition could generate two types of effects: better/worse outcomes due to programme participation (i.e. the fact that pupils repeat a particular grade). This is what the existing literature on grade repetition has focused on. Another potential outcome is the "threat" effect of grade…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade Repetition, Educational Change, Outcomes of Education
Rubb, Stephen – Education Economics, 2014
Contrary to expectations, the likelihood of overeducation is shown to be inversely related to unemployment rates when not control for selectivity. Furthermore, incidence data show that overeducation is more common among men than women and among Whites than Blacks. At issue is selectivity: employment must be selected for overeducation to occur.…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Unemployment, Incidence, Influences
Blunch, Niels-Hugo – Education Economics, 2014
Several African countries instituted education reforms in the 1980s and 1990s. Yet, there is only little evidence on the effectiveness of these programs. Additionally, most previous studies of the determinants of literacy and numeracy have considered the proficiency in only one language and, possibly, numeracy. This paper examines both of these…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literacy Education, Numeracy, Mathematics Education
De Witte, Kristof; Van Klaveren, Chris – Education Economics, 2014
This paper examines which configuration of teaching activities maximizes student performance. For this purpose a nonparametric efficiency model is formulated that accounts for (1) self-selection of students and teachers in better schools and (2) complementary teaching activities. The analysis distinguishes both individual teaching (i.e., a…
Descriptors: Nonparametric Statistics, Models, Teaching Styles, Individualized Instruction
Feng, Li – Education Economics, 2014
Teachers' initial placement has important implications for student achievement and the distribution of teachers among schools. This paper combines data from a US Baccalaureate and Beyond longitudinal study with school and school district information from the Common Core of Data to study the effects of initial school placement on teacher…
Descriptors: Teacher Placement, Faculty Mobility, Career Choice, Longitudinal Studies
Coneus, Katja; Laucht, Manfred – Education Economics, 2014
This paper investigates the impact of early noncognitive skills on social outcomes in adolescence. The child's attention span, approach, prevailing mood and distractibility in early childhood may be crucial predictors for school achievements, health risk behavior, delinquency and autonomy as adolescent. We investigate this issue using a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Young Children, Personality
Mancebón-Torrubia, María Jesús; Ximénez-de-Embún, Domingo Pérez – Education Economics, 2014
The aim of this paper is to test whether the distribution of students by social, cultural and racial characteristics is homogeneous between Spanish public schools (PS) and publicly subsidised private schools (PSPS) or whether segregation exists between the profile of pupils attending each type of school. The theoretical framework is based on the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Choice, Public Schools, Private Schools
Hardoy, Inés; Schøne, Pål – Education Economics, 2014
The main purpose of this paper is to analyse the return to pre-immigration education for non-western immigrants, and explain why it is so low. Returns to one extra year of education is three times higher for ethnic Norwegians than for non-western immigrants. Using the method "Over-Required-Under" (ORU) education approach, we reveal that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outcomes of Education, Immigrants, Educational Attainment
García-Suaza, Andrés Felipe; Guataquí, Juan Carlos; Guerra, José Alberto; Maldonado, Darío – Education Economics, 2014
In order to present an estimation of the internal rate of return (IRR) to higher education in Colombia, we take advantage of recent updates on the methodological approach towards earnings equations. In order to overcome the criticism that surrounds interpretations of the education coefficient of Mincer equations as being the rate of return to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outcomes of Education, Higher Education, Computation
Koedel, Cory – Education Economics, 2014
This paper documents substantial differences across states in their higher education (HE) structures and highlights several empirical relationships between these structures and individuals' HE outcomes. Not surprisingly, individuals who are exposed to more-fractionalized HE structures are more likely to attend small public universities and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Outcomes of Education, Public Colleges, Small Colleges
Jin, Yanhong H.; Mjelde, James W.; Litzenberg, Kerry K. – Education Economics, 2014
Economic tradeoffs students place on location, salary, distances to natural resource amenities, size of the city where the job is located, and commuting times for their first college graduate job are estimated using a mixed logit model for a sample of Texas A&M University students. The Midwest is the least preferred area having a mean salary…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Salaries, Geographic Location, College Graduates
Rubb, Stephen – Education Economics, 2014
Using data from the 2004 National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses, the role of occupational heterogeneity in the standard overeducation-required-undereducation (ORU) earnings function introduced by Duncan and Hoffman [1981. "The incidence and wage effects of overeducation." "Economics of Education Review" 1, no. 1: 75-86] is…
Descriptors: Nurses, National Surveys, Occupational Surveys, Income
Horstschräer, Julia; Muehler, Grit – Education Economics, 2014
Fixed cutoff dates regulating school entry create disadvantages for children who are young relative to their classmates. Early and late school enrollment, though, might mitigate these disadvantages. In this paper, we analyze in a first step which factors determine school entry, if entrance screenings allow for early and late enrollment. Second, we…
Descriptors: School Entrance Age, Child Development, Disadvantaged, Screening Tests
Lara, Christen; Johnson, Daniel – Education Economics, 2014
In 2011, philanthropic giving to higher education institutions totaled $30.3 billion, an 8.2% increase over the previous year. Roughly, 26% of those funds came from alumni donations. This article builds upon existing economic models to create an econometric model to explain and predict the pattern of alumni giving. We test the model using data…
Descriptors: Private Financial Support, Donors, Higher Education, Educational Finance
Krassel, Karl Fritjof; Heinesen, Eskil – Education Economics, 2014
We analyze class-size effects on academic achievement in secondary school in Denmark exploiting an institutional setting where pupils cannot predict class size prior to enrollment, and where post-enrollment responses aimed at affecting realized class size are unlikely. We identify class-size effects combining a regression discontinuity design with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Class Size, Academic Achievement, Correlation

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