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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 451 to 465 of 472 results
Gordon, Nora; Knight, Brian – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2006
This paper examines the forces behind political integration through the lens of school district consolidations, which reduced the number of school districts in the United States from around 130,000 in 1930 to under 15,000 at present. Despite this large observed decline, many districts resisted consolidation before ultimately merging and others…
Descriptors: School Districts, Incentives, Rural Schools, Resistance to Change
Goldin, Claudia – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2006
The modern economic role of women emerged in four phases. The first three were evolutionary; the last was revolutionary. Phase I occurred from the late nineteenth century to the 1920s; Phase II was from 1930 to 1950; Phase III extended from 1950 to the late 1970s; and Phase IV, the "quiet revolution," began in the late 1970s and is still ongoing.…
Descriptors: Females, Employed Women, History, Labor Force
Stoddard, Christiana; Kuhn, Peter – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2006
Beyond some contracted minimum, salaried workers' hours are largely chosen at the worker's discretion and should respond to the strength of contract incentives. Accordingly, we consider the response of teacher hours to accountability and school choice laws introduced in U.S. public schools over the past two decades. Total weekly hours of full-time…
Descriptors: School Choice, Public Schools, Accountability, Educational Change
Duflo, Esther; Hanna, Rema – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
In the rural areas of developing countries, teacher absence is a widespread problem. This paper tests whether a simple incentive program based on teacher presence can reduce teacher absence, and whether it has the potential to lead to more teaching activities and better learning. In 60 informal one-teacher schools in rural India, randomly chosen…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Photography, Rural Schools, One Teacher Schools
Banerjee, Abhijit; Cole, Shawn; Duflo, Esther; Linden, Leigh – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
Many efforts to improve school quality by adding school resources have proven to be ineffective. This paper presents the results of two experiments conducted in Mumbai and Vadodara, India, designed to evaluate ways to improve the quality of education in urban slums. A remedial education program hired young women from the community to teach basic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Slums, Urban Schools, Literacy Education
Furstenberg, Frank F., Jr.; Neumark, David – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
We study a set of programs implemented in Philadelphia high schools that focus on boosting post-secondary enrollment. These programs are less career oriented than traditional school-to work programs, but are consistent with the broadening of the goals of school-to-work to emphasize post-secondary education. The Philadelphia Longitudinal…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, High Schools, College Attendance, Graduation
Dee, Thomas S. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
In the United States, girls outperform boys in measures of reading achievement while generally underperforming in science and mathematics. One major class of explanations for these gaps involves the gender-based interactions between students and teachers (e.g., role-model and Pygmalion effects). However, the evidence on whether these interactions…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Middle School Students, Middle School Teachers, Academic Achievement
Figlio, David N.; Rouse, Cecilia – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
In this paper we study the effects of the threat of school vouchers and school stigma in Florida on the performance of "low-performing" schools using student-level data from a subset of districts. Estimates of the change in school-level high-stakes test scores from the first year of the reform are consistent with the early results used by the…
Descriptors: Student Characteristics, Mathematics Tests, Educational Vouchers, Academic Achievement
Neumark, David; Rothstein, Donna – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
This paper tests whether school-to-work (STW) programs are particularly beneficial for those less likely to go to college in their absence--often termed the "forgotten half"' in the STW literature. The empirical analysis is based on the NLSY97, which allows us to study six types of STW programs, including job shadowing, mentoring, coop, school…
Descriptors: Tech Prep, Males, Mentors, Job Shadowing
Ashenfelter, Orley; Collins, William J.; Yoon, Albert – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
In this paper we study the long-term labor market implications of school resource equalization before Brown and school desegregation after Brown. For cohorts born in the South in the 1920s and 1930s, we find that racial disparities in measurable school characteristics had a substantial influence on black males' earnings and educational attainment…
Descriptors: Income, Males, Labor Market, Educational Attainment
Boyd, Donald; Grossman, Pamela; Lankford, Hamilton; Loeb, Susanna; Wyckoff, James – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
We are in the midst of what amounts to a national experiment in how best to attract, prepare, and retain teachers, particularly for high poverty urban schools. Using data on students and teachers in grades three through eight, this study assesses the effects of pathways into teaching in New York City on the teacher workforce and on student…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Urban Schools, Academic Achievement, Preservice Teacher Education
Fryer, Roland G.; Levitt, Steven D. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
This paper describes basic facts regarding the black-white test score gap over the first four years of school. Black children enter school substantially behind their white counterparts in reading and math, but including a small number of covariates erases the gap. Over the first four years of school, however, blacks lose substantial ground…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, African American Students, White Students, Academic Achievement
Hanushek, Eric A.; Kain, John F.; O'Brien, Daniel M.; Rivkin, Steven G. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
Much of education policy focuses on improving teacher quality, but most policies lack strong research support. We use student achievement gains to estimate teacher value-added, our measure of teacher quality. The analysis reveals substantial variation in the quality of instruction, most of which occurs within rather than between schools. Although…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Beginning Teacher Induction, Achievement Gains, Racial Differences
Jacob, Brian A.; Lefgren, Lars – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
This paper examines revealed parent preferences for their children's education using a unique data set that includes the number of parent requests for individual elementary school teachers along with information on teacher attributes including principal reports of teacher characteristics that are typically unobservable. We find that, on average,…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Values, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Characteristics
Neal, Derek – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005
All data sources indicate that black-white skill gaps diminished over most of the 20th century, but black-white skill gaps as measured by test scores among youth and educational attainment among young adults have remained constant or increased in absolute value since the late 1980s. I examine the potential importance of discrimination against…
Descriptors: Public Policy, African Americans, Whites, Racial Discrimination
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