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Amanda Schmidt – Blueprint Labs, 2024
In urban areas like New York City, school choice systems intend to break the connection between residential segregation and schooling by allowing students to attend schools outside their neighborhoods. If successful, school choice could benefit historically underserved students. However, recent research suggests that achievement gaps and…
Descriptors: Racial Differences, School Choice, Preferences, Student Diversity
Brian M. Wooten – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The Helping Outstanding Pupils Educationally (HOPE) scholarship marked a significant advancement in education by offering expanded opportunities for Georgia students earning a high school GPA of 3.00 or higher to attend a University System of Georgia (USG) institution. This quantitative study examined individuals who earned a bachelor's degree…
Descriptors: Scholarships, College Students, College Graduates, Majors (Students)
Christina Baker; Paul F. Cook – Journal of School Nursing, 2025
Parental vaccine hesitancy has been a hotly debated issue long before the COVID-19 pandemic. Still, the emergence of a new vaccine during this public health crisis made even pro-vaccine individuals reconsider vaccines for their children. This scoping review was conducted to understand why parents expressed hesitancy towards the COVID-19 vaccine…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, COVID-19, Pandemics, Immunization Programs
Verónica López; Claudio Allende; Christina Bosch; Sebastián Ortiz-Mallegas; Juan Pablo Valenzuela; Luis González – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2024
Although inclusive education policies conflict with punitive discipline measures, inclusion in mainstream schools may coexist with or allow such exclusionary punitive discipline. In Latin America, however, there is scarce research on how punitive measures are distributed, and if and how they affect students with disabilities enrolled in regular…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Inclusion, Discipline, Punishment
Zhuldyz Amankulova; Christopher Whitsel – European Education, 2024
A diverse education market has formed in Kazakhstan since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Previous studies of educational choice in Central Asia have laid a general foundation, but greater insight into class differences has not been studied in Central Asia. We utilize data collected in 2015 from over 300 households in six cities in Kazakhstan to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Class, Social Differences, Urban Schools
Carol A. Mullen; Robert J. Nitowski – International Journal of Educational Reform, 2024
Dropout is a global crisis and an affliction in the United States. This study analyzes graduation rates based on prior academic achievement, attendance, and behavior at an urban American high school in Virginia over 4 years to identify who is (not) graduating and why. Using a correlational, nonexperimental design, four cohorts of graduates were…
Descriptors: Dropouts, High School Students, Graduation Rate, Academic Achievement
Caroline Zawadi Muteti – ProQuest LLC, 2024
General Chemistry courses are often challenging for first-year college students preparing for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) programs. These courses are among the STEM gateway courses in which many students struggle to get through, or are weeded out. This is partly due to the use of ineffective study strategies such as…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Intervention, Student Educational Objectives, General Education
Mengli Song; Kristina Zeiser; Kyle Neering; Robert Schwarzhaupt; Sara Mitchell – American Institutes for Research, 2024
This report describes results from the Long-Term Impact of Early College High Schools Study--funded by the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) (#R305A210017)--which aimed to explore the long-term impacts of early college (EC) high schools on students' academic outcomes (e.g., college enrollment, degree attainment) and workforce, financial, and…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Dual Enrollment, College Preparation, High Schools
Karen Gross – ProQuest LLC, 2024
For school districts to adequately prepare students with disabilities for successful post-graduation life, it is essential to understand if various variables predict postsecondary outcomes. The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between gender, race/ethnicity, participation in career technical education (CTE) programs, diploma…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Predictor Variables, Gender Differences, Racial Differences
Virginia Clinton-Lisell; Alison E. Kelly – International Journal of Technology in Education and Science, 2024
The use of online homework systems that require the purchase of an access code has become widespread. The purpose of this study is to examine student experiences with and perceptions of online homework systems with access codes. Postsecondary students (N = 966) completed a survey about the financial costs, perceptions of quality, engagement with,…
Descriptors: Homework, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Student Experience
Mary Elizabeth Lockhart; Oi-Man Kwok; Myeongsun Yoon – International Journal of Science Education, 2024
The construct of science identity has been gaining attention across various domains in the educational arena. To date, however, no studies have used a person-centered quantitative approach within science identity research that is based upon traditional identity theory. Hence, there is an absence of a theoretical underpinning of the number of…
Descriptors: Sciences, Self Concept, Classification, Rural Schools
Allison Gilmour; Equia Aniagyei-Cobbold; Roddy Theobald – National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research (CALDER), 2024
We used longitudinal staffing data from Pennsylvania to explore differences in special education personnel attrition across personnel categories, individual characteristics, and district characteristics. Special education administrators and school psychologists had the highest attrition rates among special education personnel, with special…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Faculty Mobility, Teacher Persistence, Teacher Characteristics
Stephen Ponisciak; Julie W. Dallavis – Journal of Catholic Education, 2024
In response to COVID-19, U.S. students learned remotely from mid-March to June 2020. At the start of academic year 2020--21, many schools remained remote but others--primarily Catholic and other private schools--reopened. We consider Catholic schooling as a proxy for in-person instruction and use national data from Renaissance Star and MAP Growth…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, COVID-19, Pandemics, In Person Learning
Kate L. Phillippo; Elizabeth Levine Brown; Linda Galib; Ken A. Fujimoto; Aidyn L. Iachini; Naomi Brown; Crystal Lennix; Audra Parker; Tasha M. Childs – AERA Open, 2024
Teachers often address student wellness concerns such as health and mental health. Yet, this work goes largely unacknowledged and unsupported by professional preparation. COVID-19 intensified these concerns amid disrupted systems of student support and increased student distress. Our national survey (N = 1398) pursued the powerful opportunity…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Wellness, Teacher Role
Maria Enriqueta Cobo Enriquez de Luna; Maria Tamara Polo Sanchez; Carolina Fernandez Jimenez – Electronic Journal of Research in Educational Psychology, 2024
Introduction: Based on the Social Cognitive Model of Career Development (SCCT) theory, the academic development process of university students is analyzed. Self-efficacy and outcome expectations are core constructs within the SCCT, which are influenced according to the model by personal factors and predispositions, such as disability, sex or race.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Self Efficacy, Expectation