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Showing 1 to 15 of 87 results Save | Export
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Beatrice Schindler Rangvid – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2025
Policies aiming to promote the mainstreaming of students with special educational needs in regular classrooms have become a focal point of political discussions in many countries. However, there is a scarcity of quantitative evidence with robust empirical designs that can shed light on the long-term educational outcomes associated with mainstream…
Descriptors: Mainstreaming, Special Needs Students, Secondary School Students, Educational Attainment
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Binwei Lu; Jake Anders; Nadia Siddiqui; Xin Shao – Educational Review, 2024
Extensive literature has compared the effect of selective schools with that of non-selective schools on pupil outcomes in England. However, evaluation of selective systems has been sparse and contradictory. From the perspective of educational equity, this study assesses the potential impact of academically selective school systems on pupils'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Selective Admission, Admission Criteria, Educational Attainment
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Ioannis Katsantonis; Ryan Alberto Gibbons; Jennifer E. Symonds; Niall Costello – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
There are few longitudinal studies of adolescent students' choice to persist in post-compulsory education. Hence, the present study introduces a longitudinal model that describes the interplay between sociological and psychological explanations of adolescents' choice to persist in post-compulsory education in the UK. Data on parental education,…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Compulsory Education, Academic Persistence, Educational Attainment
Masuda, Kazuya; Shigeoka, Hitoshi – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2023
We examine the mortality effects of a 1947 school reform in Japan, which extended compulsory schooling from primary to secondary school by as much as 3 years. The abolition of secondary school fees also indicates that those affected by the reform likely came from disadvantaged families who could have benefited the most from schooling. Even in this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Death, Compulsory Education, Secondary Education
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Nadja Bömmel; Guido Heineck – Education Economics, 2023
Many studies suggest a relationship between education and political participation, but only some address causality. We add to this by re-examining the German case. For identification, we exploit an exogenous increase in compulsory schooling, and use data from the National Educational Panel Study (NEPS). The data enable analyses that do not rely…
Descriptors: Correlation, Educational Attainment, Political Attitudes, Attribution Theory
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Dilmaghani, Maryam – Education Economics, 2021
The present paper assesses the causal effects of education on smoking and self-rated health in Canada. Education is instrumented using the changes in compulsory schooling laws. The sample is restricted to cohorts born between 1946 and 1964. The data are from the Canadian General Social Surveys of 1995 and 2016, allowing to observe the evolution of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Smoking, Correlation, Educational Attainment
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Yi?gi?t, Büsra; Çakmak, B. Yasin; Çakmak, Eyüp Ensar – Education & Training, 2023
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to improve understanding of the role of the family as NEET determinants in a country with free education in a Mediterranean or Southern European welfare state, so that the authors can contribute to policy recommendations and offer suggestions for future studies. Design/methodology/approach: The authors used…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Out of School Youth, Parent Background, Educational Attainment
Barcellos, Silvia H.; Carvalho, Leandro S.; Turley, Patrick – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2019
This paper studies distributional effects of education on health. In 1972, England, Scotland, and Wales raised their minimum school-leaving age from 15 to 16 for students born after 9/1/1957. Using a regression discontinuity design and objective health measures for 0.27 million individuals, we find that education reduced body size and increased…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outcomes of Education, Health, Body Composition
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Coxhead, Ian; Vuong, Nguyen Dinh Tuan; Nguyen, Phong – Education Economics, 2023
Blue-collar employment growth increases schooling opportunities by raising incomes, but also reduces incentives for some students to advance beyond compulsory education. These contradictory influences may help to explain relatively slow and uneven growth of progression to upper-secondary schooling in Vietnam, which has experienced a foreign…
Descriptors: Blue Collar Occupations, Employment Opportunities, Dropouts, Manufacturing
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Dang, Thang – Education Economics, 2019
This paper estimates the causal effects of education on political concern and political participation in Vietnam by employing the 1991 compulsory schooling reform to instrument for plausibly exogenous changes in education. The paper finds that, in general, education does cause favorable impacts on political outcomes. In particular, one more year…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Political Attitudes, Educational Change, Educational History
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Brännström, Malin – Power and Education, 2021
The education of newly arrived students is a debated global policy issue. Less attention has been paid to the sub-group of students with limited experience of schooling, referred to here as 'newly arrived students with limited schooling' (NALS). This article explores Swedish policy frameworks that inform the education of newly arrived students,…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Educational Policy, Educational Background, Comparative Analysis
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Dilmaghani, Maryam – Education Economics, 2019
The present study assesses how education impacts religiosity. Education is instrumented using the changes in the Canadian school leaving age laws. The data are from the Canadian General Social Surveys collected between 1990 and 2011. The effects of education on both affiliation status and religious attendance are considered. Education is found to…
Descriptors: Religion, Beliefs, Catholics, Educational Legislation
Johnson, Martin; Majewska, Dominika – Cambridge University Press & Assessment, 2022
This review uses research literature to outline the characteristics, benefits and disadvantages of formal, non-formal, and informal learning. There appears to be a consensus around the meanings of formal and informal learning. Formal learning broadly aligns with organised, institutionalised learning models (such as learning seen in schools),…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Informal Education, Models, Educational Cooperation
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Moussa, Wael S. – Education Finance and Policy, 2017
High school graduation rates are a central policy topic in the United States and have been shown to be stagnant for the past three decades. Using student-level administrative data from New York City Public Schools, I examine the impact of compulsory school attendance on high school graduation rates and grade attainment, focusing the analysis on…
Descriptors: Compulsory Education, Graduation Rate, High School Students, Grade 9
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Atanasoska, Tatjana; Proyer, Michelle – European Educational Research Journal, 2018
This paper offers first-hand accounts of refugees beyond the age of compulsory education having arrived in Austria during the last five years. Their accounts were collected using qualitative interviews and a visual method to allow for different approaches towards their educational biographies. Nine individual and two group interviews (altogether…
Descriptors: Refugees, College Entrance Examinations, Interviews, Foreign Countries
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