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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
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Arulampalam, Wiji; Naylor, Robin A.; Smith, Jeremy – Economics of Education Review, 2012
We analyse a rich dataset of Economics students at a UK university to identify causal effects of class absence on student performance, exploiting the random assignment of students and information on students' class timetables to avoid selection problems. We use panel properties of the data to control for unobserved student factors such as ability…
Descriptors: Attendance, Academic Achievement, Economics Education, College Students
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De Paola, Maria; Scoppa, Vincenzo – Economics of Education Review, 2011
We carry out a randomized experiment involving undergraduate students enrolled at an Italian University attending two introductory economics classes to evaluate the impact on achievement of examination frequency and interim feedback provision. Students in the treated group were allowed to undertake an intermediate exam and were informed about the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Testing, Introductory Courses, Economics Education
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Bartolj, Tjasa; Polanec, Saso – Economics of Education Review, 2012
In this paper we study the impact of cognitive ability on college major choices using an administrative data set for full-time students enrolled in four-year business and economics programs offered by the largest Slovenian university. In contrast to existing studies, we are able to distinguish between general ability, measured with high school…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Majors (Students), Course Selection (Students), College Students
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Mandel, Philipp; Susmuth, Bernd – Economics of Education Review, 2011
The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, we examine the impact of class size on student evaluations of instructor performance using a sample of approximately 1400 economics classes held at the University of Munich from Fall 1998 to Summer 2007. We offer confirmatory evidence for the recent finding of a large, highly significant, and…
Descriptors: Class Size, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance, College Students, Economics Education
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Takahashi, Ana Maria; Takahashi, Shingo – Economics of Education Review, 2011
By using unique survey data, we conduct a detailed study of the gender salary gap within economics departments in Japan. Despite the presence of rigid pay scales emphasizing age and experience, there is a 7% gender salary gap after controlling for rank and detailed personal, job, institutional and human capital characteristics. This gender salary…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Salary Wage Differentials, Gender Differences, Economics Education
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Hilmer, Michael J.; Hilmer, Christiana E. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Previous research finds that both Ph.D. program quality and relative dissertation advisor prominence are positively related to early-career publishing success. We provide insight into the relative importance of those factors by estimating early-career research productivity functions that: (1) allow relative dissertation advisor prominence to vary…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Educational Quality, Doctoral Programs, College Faculty
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Bedard, Kelly; Kuhn, Peter – Economics of Education Review, 2008
We examine the impact of class size on student evaluations of instructor performance using data on all economics classes offered at the University of California, Santa Barbara from Fall 1997 to Spring 2004. A particular strength of this data is the opportunity to control for both instructor and course fixed effects. In contrast to the literature…
Descriptors: Class Size, Student Evaluation, Feedback (Response), Higher Education
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Budria, Santiago; Moro-Egido, Ana I. – Economics of Education Review, 2008
In this paper, we explore the connection between education and wage inequality in Spain for the period 1994-2001. Drawing on quantile regression, we describe the conditional wage distribution of different populations groups. We find that higher education is associated with higher wage dispersion. A contribution of the paper is that we explicitly…
Descriptors: Wages, Salary Wage Differentials, Foreign Countries, Employment Qualifications
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Stock, Wendy A.; Finegan, T. Aldrich; Siegfried, John J. – Economics of Education Review, 2009
We investigate graduate school outcomes for students who entered economics Ph.D. programs in Fall 2002. Students in Top-15 ranked programs and those with higher verbal and quantitative GRE scores are less likely to have dropped out, but no more likely to have graduated. Those with undergraduate degrees from Top-60 U.S. liberal arts colleges and…
Descriptors: Probability, Liberal Arts, Graduate Study, Doctoral Degrees
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Rask, Kevin; Tiefenthaler, Jill – Economics of Education Review, 2008
There is a gender imbalance in undergraduate economics departments with most departments educating a strong majority of young men. This imbalance has led many economists to ponder the question of why relatively few women choose to take courses and major in economics. Our hypothesis is that the gender imbalance in undergraduate economics,…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Grade Point Average, Economics Education, Females
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Grant, Darren – Economics of Education Review, 2007
We determine how much observed student performance in microeconomics principles can be attributed, inferentially, to three kinds of student academic "productivity," the instructor, demographics, and unmeasurables. The empirical approach utilizes an ordered probit model that relates student performance in micro to grades in prior…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Academic Achievement
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Fizel, John L.; Fiedler, John L. – Economics of Education Review, 1986
A sample of 328 freshman economics students is disaggregated by the students' gender, previous knowledge of economics, attitudes toward economics, and innate abilities. Results show that students learn more economics if they take microeconomics before macroeconomics. Appended are 14 references. (MLF)
Descriptors: Curriculum Research, Economics Education, Higher Education, Learning
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Liu, Haoming; Park, Cheolsung – Economics of Education Review, 2004
This paper examines the evolution of the graduation-publication process of economics PhDs over the past three decades. Using data on their first publications in top economics journals, we find that the process has considerably slowed down. The number of pages, authors and informal collaborators per article, and the PhD's place of work can…
Descriptors: Graduation, Journal Articles, Periodicals, Social Science Research
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Kennedy, Peter E; Siegfried, John J. – Economics of Education Review, 1997
Explores whether class size affects achievement in introductory college economics, using the 1988-89 Test of Understanding in College Economics database (TUCE III). Results indicate that neither class size nor certain controlled class characteristics affect student achievement. Results are markedly robust, when using SAT scores to control for…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Class Size, Classroom Environment, College Students
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Lombardi, Waldo; Ramrattan, Lall B.; Szenberg, Michael – Economics of Education Review, 2004
This paper presents data and empirical models to explain the causes of the decline in the enrollment of economics majors during the 1991-1992 to 1995-1996 academic years. It first discusses the theoretical bases for a qualitative analysis of this type. It then discusses a sample survey methodology used to obtain cross-sectional information from…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Majors (Students), Declining Enrollment, Colleges
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