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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 301 to 315 of 472 results
Cascio, Elizabeth U. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
In the 1960s and 1970s, many states introduced grants for school districts offering kindergarten programs. This paper exploits the staggered timing of these initiatives to estimate the long-term effects of a large public investment in universal early education. I find that white children aged five after the typical state reform were less likely to…
Descriptors: Investment, Dropouts, Academic Achievement, Kindergarten
Carrell, Scott E.; Page, Marianne E.; West, James E. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
Why aren't there more women in science? Female college students are currently 37 percent less likely than males to obtain a bachelor's degree in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM), and comprise only 25 percent of the STEM workforce. This paper begins to shed light on this issue by exploiting a unique dataset of college students who…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Sex, Teacher Influence, Gender Differences
Freeman, Richard B. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
This study documents the rapid spread of higher education around the world and the consequent reduced share of the US in the world's university students and graduates. It shows that the proportion of young persons who go to college has risen in many advanced countries to exceed that in the US while human capital leapfrogging in the huge populous…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Human Capital, Immigrants, Foreign Students
Atlas, Steven J.; Skinner, Jonathan S. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
Many Americans report chronic and disabling pain, even in the absence of identifiable clinical disorders. We first examine the prevalence of pain in the older U.S. population using the Health and Retirement Study (HRS). Among 50-59 year females, for example, pain rates ranged from 26 percent for college graduates to 55 percent for those without a…
Descriptors: Medical Services, Marital Status, Pain, Incidence
Qian, Nancy – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
Many believe that increasing the quantity of children will lead to a decrease in their quality. This paper exploits plausibly exogenous changes in family size caused by relaxations in China's One Child Policy to estimate the causal effect of family size on school enrollment of the first child. The results show that for one-child families, an…
Descriptors: Family Size, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries, Enrollment
Remler, Dahlia K.; Pema, Elda – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
Higher education institutions and disciplines that traditionally did little research now reward faculty largely based on research, both funded and unfunded. Some worry that faculty devoting more time to research harms teaching and thus harms students' human capital accumulation. The economics literature has largely ignored the reasons for and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Human Capital, Teacher Effectiveness, Rewards
Sen, Bisakha; Mennemeyer, Stephen; Gary, Lisa C. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
It has long been posited by scientists that we need to have a better understanding in the role that larger contextual factors -- like neighborhood quality and the built environment -- may have on the nation's obesity crisis. This paper explores whether maternal perceptions of neighborhood quality affect children's bodyweight outcomes, and whether…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Obesity, Whites, Family Income
Sandy, Robert; Liu, Gilbert; Ottensmann, John; Tchernis, Rusty; Wilson, Jeffrey; Ford, O.T. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
We utilize clinical records of successive visits by children to pediatric clinics in Indianapolis to estimate the effects on their body mass of environmental changes near their homes. We compare results for fixed-residence children with those for cross-sectional data. Our environmental factors are fast food restaurants, supermarkets, parks,…
Descriptors: Obesity, Food, Body Composition, Clinics
Kaestner, Robert; Grossman, Michael; Yarnoff, Benjamin – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
In this paper, we investigate the association between weight and adolescent's educational attainment, as measured by highest grade attended, highest grade completed, and drop out status. Data for the study came from the 1997 cohort of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY), which contains a large, national sample of teens between the…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Adolescents, Body Weight, Dropout Rate
Herbst, Chris M.; Tekin, Erdal – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
Child care subsidies play a critical role in facilitating the transition of disadvantaged mothers from welfare to work. However, little is known about the influence of these policies on children's health and well-being. In this paper, we study the impact of subsidy receipt on low-income children's weight outcomes in the fall and spring of…
Descriptors: Child Care, Grants, Obesity, Low Income Groups
Han, Euna; Norton, Edward C.; Powell, Lisa M. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
Previous estimates on the association between body weight and wages in the literature have been contingent on education and occupation. This paper examines the direct effect of BMI on wages and the indirect effects operating through education and occupation choice, particularly for late-teen BMI and adult wages. Using the National Longitudinal…
Descriptors: Wages, Body Weight, Salary Wage Differentials, Late Adolescents
Powell, Lisa M.; Chaloupka, Frank J. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
This study examines the relationship between child weight and fast food and fruit and vegetable prices and the availability of fast food restaurants, full-service restaurants, supermarkets, grocery stores and convenience stores . We estimate cross-sectional and individual-level fixed effects (FE) models to account for unobserved individual-level…
Descriptors: Body Weight, Children, Body Composition, Economic Factors
Hanna, Rema; Linden. Leigh – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
In this paper, we illustrate a methodology to measure discrimination in educational contexts. In India, we ran an exam competition through which children compete for a large financial prize. We recruited teachers to grade the exams. We then randomly assigned child "characteristics" (age, gender, and caste) to the cover sheets of the exams to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Discrimination, Measurement, Scoring
Abdulkadiroglu, Atila; Pathak, Parag A.; Roth, Alvin E. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
The design of the New York City (NYC) High School match involved tradeoffs among efficiency, stability and strategy-proofness that raise new theoretical questions. We analyze a model with indifferences--ties--in school preferences. Simulations with field data and the theory favor breaking indifferences the same way at every school--single tie…
Descriptors: High Schools, Urban Schools, Efficiency, Student Placement
Brown, Meta; Scholz, John Karl; Seshadri, Ananth – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
We discuss a simple model of intergenerational transfers with one-sided altruism: parents care about their child but the child does not reciprocate. Parents and children make investments in the child's education, investments for other purposes, and parents can transfer cash to their child. We show that for an identifiable set of parent-child…
Descriptors: Parent Student Relationship, Models, Student Financial Aid, Parent Financial Contribution
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