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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 421 to 435 of 472 results
Fletcher, Jason; Wolfe, Barbara L. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
Recently, Currie and Stabile (2006) made a significant contribution to our understanding of the influence of ADHD symptoms on a variety of school outcomes including participation in special education, grade repetition and test scores. Their contributions include using a broad sample of children and estimating sibling fixed effects models to…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Grade Repetition, Mental Health, Child Health
Cullen, Julie Berry; Jacob, Brian A. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
In this paper, we examine whether expanded access to sought-after schools can improve academic achievement. The setting we study is the "open enrollment" system in the Chicago Public Schools (CPS). We use lottery data to avoid the critical issue of non-random selection of students into schools. Our analysis sample includes nearly 450 lotteries for…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Selective Admission, Elementary School Students, Elementary Schools
Angrist, Joshua D.; Chen, Stacey H. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
This paper uses the 2000 Census 1-in-6 sample to look at the long-term impact of Vietnam-era military service. Instrumental Variables estimates using draft-lottery instruments show post-service earnings losses close to zero in 2000, in contrast with earlier results showing substantial earnings losses for white veterans in the 1970s and 1980s. The…
Descriptors: Military Service, Income, Physical Health, Longitudinal Studies
Barnighausen, Till; Bloom, David E. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
Without large increases in the number of health workers to treat HIV/AIDS (HAHW), most developing countries will be unable to achieve universal coverage with antiretroviral treatment (ART), leading to large numbers of potentially avoidable deaths among people living with HIV/AIDS. We use Markov Monte Carlo microsimulation to estimate the expected…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scholarships, Developing Nations, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)
Miller, Raegen T.; Murnane, Richard J.; Willett, John B. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
Rates of employee absences and the effects of absences on productivity are topics of conversation in many organizations in many countries. One reason is that high rates of employee absence may signal weak management and poor labor-management relations. A second reason is that reducing rates of employee absence may be an effective way to improve…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Mathematics Achievement, Teacher Attendance, Employee Absenteeism
Jacob, Brian A. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
This paper explores the phenomenon referred to as test score inflation, which occurs when achievement gains on "high-stakes" exams outpace improvements on "low-stakes" tests. The first part of the paper documents the extent to which student performance trends on state assessments differ from those on the National Assessment of Educational Progress…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Academic Achievement, National Competency Tests, Scores
Clotfelter, Charles T.; Ladd, Helen F.; Vigdor, Jacob L. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
Education researchers and policy makers agree that teachers differ in terms of quality and that quality matters for student achievement. Despite prodigious amounts of research, however, debate still persists about the causal relationship between specific teacher credentials and student achievement. In this paper, we use a rich administrative data…
Descriptors: Teacher Qualifications, Academic Achievement, Credentials, Teacher Characteristics
Weinberg, Bruce A.; Fleisher, Belton M.; Hashimoto, Masanori – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
This paper studies methods for evaluating instruction in higher education. We explore student evaluations of instruction and a variety of alternatives. We develop a simple model to illustrate the biases inherent in student evaluations. Measuring learning using grades in future courses, we show that student evaluations are positively related to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Student Evaluation, Grades (Scholastic), Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance
Garibaldi, Pietro; Giavazzi, Francesco; Ichino, Andrea Ichino; Rettore, Enrico – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
Many students enrolled in academic programs around the world take longer to obtain a degree than the normal completion time while college tuition is typically constant during the years of enrollment. In particular, it does not increase when a student remains in a program beyond the normal completion time. Using a Regression Discontinuity Design on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Tuition, Student Costs, Time to Degree
Cunha, Flavio; Heckman, James – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
This paper develops a model of skill formation that explains a variety of findings established in the child development and child intervention literatures. At its core is a technology that is stage-specific and that features self productivity, dynamic complementarity and skill multipliers. Lessons are drawn for the design of new policies to…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Child Development, Educational Policy, Intervention
Hanushek, Eric A.; Yilmaz, Kuzey – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
An important element in considering school finance policies is that households are not passive. Instead they respond to policies with a combination of modified residential choice and political choice of tax levels. The highly stylized decision models of most existing analyses, however, lead to concerns about the policy evaluations. In our general…
Descriptors: Place of Residence, Family (Sociological Unit), Educational Finance, Public Policy
Flaherty, Colleen N. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
Tuition reimbursement programs provide financial assistance for direct costs of education and are a type of general skills training program commonly offered by employers in the United States. Standard human capital theory argues that investment in firm-specific skills reduces turnover, while investment in general skills training could result in…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Labor Turnover, Education Work Relationship, Tuition
Hastings, Justine S.; Weinstein, Jeffrey M. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
Several recent education reform measures, including the federal No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), couple school choice with accountability measures to allow parents of children in under-performing schools the opportunity to choose higher-performing schools. We use the introduction of NCLB in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District to determine if…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, School Choice, Academic Achievement, Scoring
Heckman, James J.; Masterov, Dimitriy V. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
This paper presents a productivity argument for investing in disadvantaged young children. For such investment, there is no equity-efficiency tradeoff.
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Young Children, Productivity
Go, Sun; Lindert, Peter H. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007
Three factors help to explain why school enrollments in the Northern United States were higher than those in the South and in most of Europe by 1850. One was affordability: the northern states had higher real incomes, cheaper teachers, and greater local tax support. The second was the greater autonomy of local governments. The third was the…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Rural Areas, Foreign Countries, Tax Allocation
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