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Bergbauer, Annika B. – Education Economics, 2019
The accession of Eastern European countries to the European Union increased family wealth and the returns to schooling. I analyze the change in student achievement due to the EU accession of Eastern Europe building on a panel of six PISA waves covering more than 1 million students in 32 countries. Using a difference-in-differences approach, I find…
Descriptors: International Cooperation, Academic Achievement, Correlation, Human Capital
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Monfardini, Chiara; See, Sarah Grace – Education Economics, 2016
Higher birth order positions are associated with poorer outcomes due to smaller shares of resources received within the household. Using a sample of Panel Study of Income Dynamics-Child Development Supplement children, we investigate if the negative birth order effect we find in cognitive outcomes is due to unequal allocation of mother and father…
Descriptors: Birth Order, Child Development, Cognitive Ability, Parenting Styles
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Guimaraes, Juliana; Sampaio, Breno – Education Economics, 2013
This paper examines the determinants of students' performance on the entrance test at Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, Brazil. Particular attention is paid to the importance of family background variables, such as parents' education and family income, on students' performance and how they relate to the probability of attending public schools…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Tutoring, Foreign Countries, Probability
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Adli, Rhonya; Louichi, Ahmed; Tamouh, Nadia – Education Economics, 2010
We examine the impact of sibling size on children's education. The theoretical framework shows an opposite relationship between the number of children within family and their school performance. Empirical works diverge between those corroborating this theory and those leading to ambiguous results such a positive correlation or the absence of any…
Descriptors: Siblings, Academic Achievement, Correlation, Foreign Countries
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Norberg-Schonfeldt, Magdalena – Education Economics, 2008
Data from Statistics Sweden on 70 000 students entering upper secondary school in 1994 are used along with socioeconomic characteristics from the 1990 census to explore the relationship between market work by parents in Sweden and their children's educational achievement, measured as the Grade Point Average. The results show that there is a…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Grade Point Average, Academic Achievement, Labor Market
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Cheo, Roland; Quah, Euston – Education Economics, 2005
As female labour force participation in the workforce increases in Singapore, the basic economic unit--the home--has become wealthier, although arguably at the expense of both personal and family leisure. Yet with additional income, breadwinners are better able to undertake investment for their own well-being or their children's well-being that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Environment, Tutors, Housework