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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 all 13 results
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Hanushek, Eric A.; Peterson, Paul E.; Woessmann, Ludger – Education Next, 2014
This article describes the grim sentiments from the U.S. Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, when reviewing the poor results from the U.S. performance on the 2012 Program for International Student Assessment (PISA). He noted a straightforward and stark picture of educational stagnation--that fifteen-year-olds in the U.S. today are average in…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adolescents, Science Achievement, Reading Achievement
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Branch, Gregory F.; Hanushek, Eric A.; Rivkin, Steven G. – Education Next, 2013
It is widely believed that a good principal is the key to a successful school. No Child Left Behind encouraged the replacement of the principal in persistently low-performing schools, and the Obama administration has made this a requirement for schools undergoing federally funded turnarounds. This study provides new evidence on the importance of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Principals, Instructional Leadership, Leaders
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Hanushek, Eric A. – Education Next, 2012
In all the acrimonious discussion surrounding No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB), surprisingly little attention has been given to the actual impact of that legislation and other accountability systems on student performance. Now a reputable body, a committee set up by the National Research Council (NRC), the research arm of the National…
Descriptors: Evidence, Federal Legislation, Accountability, Public Policy
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Hanushek, Eric A.; Woessmann, Ludger; Peterson, Paul E. – Education Next, 2012
In a report issued in 2010, the authors found only 6 percent of U.S. students performing at the advanced level in mathematics, a percentage lower than those attained by 30 other countries. And the problem is not limited to top-performing students. In 2011, they showed that just 32 percent of 8th graders in the United States were proficient in…
Descriptors: Mathematics Achievement, Reading Achievement, Science Achievement, Educational Change
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Hanushek, Eric A.; Peterson, Paul E.; Woessmann, Ludger – Education Next, 2011
Maintaining America's productivity as a nation depends importantly on developing a highly qualified cadre of scientists, engineers, entrepreneurs, and other professionals. To realize that objective requires a system of schooling that produces students with advanced math and science skills. To see how well schools in the United States do at…
Descriptors: Graduation, High School Graduates, Comparative Analysis, Foreign Countries
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Hanushek, Eric A. – Education Next, 2011
The magnitude of variation in the quality of teachers, even within each school, is startling. Teachers who work in a given school, and therefore teach students with similar demographic characteristics, can be responsible for increases in math and reading levels that range from a low of one-half year to a high of one and a half years of learning…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Effect Size, Teacher Characteristics, Outcome Measures
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Peterson, Paul E.; Lastra-Anadon, Carlos Xabel; Hanushek, Eric A.; Woessmann, Ludger – Education Next, 2011
At a time of persistent unemployment, especially among the less skilled, many wonder whether American schools are adequately preparing students for the 21st-century global economy. Despite high unemployment rates, firms are experiencing shortages of educated workers, outsourcing professional-level work to workers abroad, and competing for the…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Global Approach, Education Work Relationship, Achievement Rating
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Haycock, Kati; Hanushek, Eric A. – Education Next, 2010
Proposals to reauthorize No Child Left Behind seek to ensure "equitable" access to effective teachers. The U.S. Department of Education's Race to the Top fund rewards state plans for "ensuring equitable distribution of effective teachers and principals" and for "ambitious yet achievable annual targets to increase the number and percentage of…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Poverty, Federal Legislation, Compensatory Education
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Hanushek, Eric A.; Kain, John F.; Rivkin, Steven G. – Education Next, 2004
Research reveals that teachers' working conditions are more likely to determine whether they stay at a school--or even in the profession--than are their salaries. Results suggest that policymakers ought to consider selective pay increases, preferably keyed to quality, for work in inner-city schools, together with efforts to improve the working…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Databases, Educationally Disadvantaged, Elementary Education
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Hanushek, Eric A.; Kain, John F.; Rivkin, Steven G. – Education Next, 2004
Experienced teachers are, on average, more effective at raising student performance than those in their early years of teaching. This gives rise to the concern that too many teachers leave the profession after less than a full career and that too many leave troubled inner-city schools for suburban ones. Until now, the roots of these problems have…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Persistence, Teaching Conditions, Teacher Salaries
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Raymond, Margaret E.; Hanushek, Eric A. – Education Next, 2003
Disputes results of study by two Arizona State University researchers that found high-stakes testing has a negative impact on student achievement and dropout rates. (PKP)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Accountability, Criticism, Educational Research
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Hanushek, Eric A. – Education Next, 2003
Argues that failure to improve the quality of public education since publication of "A Nation at Risk" has cost the American economy hundreds of billions of dollars in unrealized growth. Asserts that policymakers must look beyond the largely ineffective efforts to improve school quality by increasing expenditures and reducing class size. (PKP)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Change, Educational Finance, Educational Policy
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Hanushek, Eric A. – Education Next, 2002
Argues that human capital formation is the key to economic growth, that U.S. students are falling behind the rest of the World in math and science achievement because of the decline in the quality of their schooling, and that without better schools, other factors such as a quality higher education system may not sustain future U.S. economic…
Descriptors: Educational Economics, Educational Quality, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education