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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The effects of crowding on a competitive activity

Schenkein, Diane, January 1973 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1973. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
2

Essays in the Economics of Education

Nguyen, Dieu Hoa Thi January 2021 (has links)
Education is at the center of upskilling human capital in developing countries, thereby positively influencing economic growth and development. For decades, many education policies targeted at developing countries have been narrowly focused on improving access to basic education (Barrett et al., 2015). However, access to education does not always translate into educational attainment. Thus, beyond the initial goal of expanding access to education in developing countries, there has been a growing focus on delivering quality education on the development agenda for developing countries in recent years. One popular policy instrument in enhancing education quality has been school choice. Analysis of school choice and the subsequent academic performance outcomes can provide new insight on the economics of education to policymakers, schools, parents and students alike. This dissertation consists of three essays, which focus on understanding the demand for public schools and the returns to school quality in a merit-based competitive school assignment system. In particular, these papers investigate how positive recognition of ability through awards can affect the students’ decision-making process; what the students might gain from attending a more selective school; and how students balance between their preferences for school characteristics and maximizing their chances of admission in a competitive school choice market. Altogether, this dissertation highlights the role of information as well as educational background in explaining differences in school choice decisions and achievement outcomes. In chapter 1, I examine the role of positive recognition on students’ school choice decisions and achievement outcomes in the context of academic competitions. Academic competitions are an essential aspect of education. Given the prevalence and the amount of resources spent organizing them, a natural question that arises is the extent of the impact on winners’ education outcomes when their talent is recognized. I exploit the award structure in Vietnam’s annual regional academic competitions to answer this question. By leveraging the pre-determined share of awards, I apply a regression discontinuity design to assess the effects of receiving a Prize and receiving an Honorable Mention. I find that both types of awards lead to improvements in educational outcomes, and the results are persistent after three years. I also find some evidence of specialization associated with receiving a Prize Award. I hypothesize that long-term effects can be partially explained by school choice: winners are significantly more likely to apply to and consequently enroll in higher-quality schools. There are also prominent differences in educational choices and outcomes along gender lines: female students are more sensitive to award receipts than male students. These findings underscore the positive motivational effects of awards, even among the top performers in a highly competitive schooling market. In chapter 2, I explore the impacts of attending a selective school on students’ educational outcomes. Students in Vietnam are assigned to public high schools based on their performance in a placement exam as well as their ranked choice of schools. Public schools are often oversubscribed, which contributes to exogeneous admission score cutoffs below which students are not considered for admission. By applying a regression discontinuity research design to these admission score cutoffs, I find that students who are marginally admitted to their top-choice public schools are exposed to significantly higher-achieving peers while finding themselves at the bottom of the ability distribution. They experience some improvements in standardized test scores at the end of their high school, but fare worse in school-based achievements and graduation outcomes. These findings highlight the importance of the potential trade-offs between attending more selective schools with better peer quality while receiving a lower ordinal rank in the ability distribution in the assigned school. In addition, the impacts of selective schools on students vary along the lines of the students’ own attitude towards studying as well as their middle school educational background. This substantial heterogeneity collectively highlights the importance of considering the students’ past educational background in interpreting how selective schools might impact students’ outcomes. In chapter 3, I investigate students’ preferences, strategic behaviors and welfare outcomes under a competitive school choice market by conducting a survey on school choice participants in two school districts in Vietnam. The original survey data on school choice participants, coupled with administrative data, afford me the opportunity to understand true preferences and strategies without involving strong assumptions on the students’ beliefs. In order to balance out their own preferences and chance of admission in such a competitive setting, the majority of students exhibit strategic behaviors. However, students from less advanced educational backgrounds tend to have large belief errors and are more likely to make strategic mistakes. Consequently, these students are at a disadvantage, as they find themselves among lower-achieving peers in their new schools. With preference data from the survey, I estimate the students’ preferences for school characteristics and find evidence of heterogeneity in students’ preferences for school characteristics: students from more advanced educational backgrounds value school selectivity and teacher qualification more than their peers. Using these estimates to evaluate students’ welfare under the current assignment mechanism as well as a counterfactual strategy-proof deferred acceptance algorithm, I find that switching to deferred acceptance algorithm can be welfare-improving, particularly for high-performing students. Overall, this paper provides a starting point to directly study the drawbacks of manipulable assignment mechanisms by using survey data and highlight the potential disparity in preferences and application strategies that can further widen the gap in educational mobility.
3

Corpos híbridos em mentes diafánas: as tribos urbanas no universo escolar de Palmas e suas inter(ações) com as tecnologias da informação e da comunicação

Silva, Valdirene Cássia da January 2007 (has links)
93 f. / Submitted by Suelen Reis (suziy.ellen@gmail.com) on 2013-05-07T18:14:47Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Dissert. Valdirene Silva.pdf: 1419299 bytes, checksum: 5696ef4316dc83865eb57fddba6b96e1 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Maria Auxiliadora Lopes(silopes@ufba.br) on 2013-06-11T16:59:42Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 Dissert. Valdirene Silva.pdf: 1419299 bytes, checksum: 5696ef4316dc83865eb57fddba6b96e1 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2013-06-11T16:59:42Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Dissert. Valdirene Silva.pdf: 1419299 bytes, checksum: 5696ef4316dc83865eb57fddba6b96e1 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2007 / Esta é uma pesquisa que se insere na discussão das interfaces entendidas como processo de inter(ação) e interatividade, das tecnologias da informação e comunicação e tribos urbanas, no contexto contemporâneo escolar, no universo especificado da Capital do Estado do Tocantins - Palmas. Foram investigados 35 jovens que se assumem como integrantes de tribos que circulam pela cidade e estudam no Centro de Ensino Médio de Palmas – CEM. A investigação esteve atrelada a uma perspectiva formativa escolar oficial e a seleção e oferta de conteúdos paralelos, mediados pelas tecnologias da informação e da comunicação, que possibilitam interações coletivas, em função da subordinação da chamada cultura urbana às tecnologias eletrônicas. O referencial teórico foi construído com base em: Zygmunt Bauman (2003), Paula Sibilia (2002), Jésus Martín Barbero (1997), Edvaldo Couto (2003), Manuel Castells (2003), Lúcia Santaella (1997), André Lemos (2004), Vani Kenski (2004), Maria Helena Bonilla (2005), José Guilherme Magnani (1992), Michael Maffesoli (2000), Don Tapscott(1998) e Pierre Levy (1999), sem desconsiderar as sinalizações de outros autores. O método, análise de conteúdo, foi adotado para a leitura das informações obtidas durante o processo de escuta. Os instrumentos utilizados, como procedimentos básicos para a coleta de dados foram observação, informações e entrevista. Os resultados permitiram concluir que tipologias distintas de jovens estão circulando no cenário escolar, convivendo com as ofertas das políticas educacionais e formativas, que se presumem hegemônicas, e, enquanto receptores vão negociando mais sentidos e significados de mundo e vida, a partir dos aparatos midiáticos. / Salvador
4

A Study of Relationships Between University Interscholastic League Participation and Selected School Characteristics

Wisdom-Walters, Patricia Bowen 08 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study was to determine whether differences exist between elementary and middle school campuses that participate in University Interscholastic League (UIL) academic activities and similar campuses that do not participate. The Texas Education Agency Academic Excellence Indicator System (AEIS) furnished data from 1993 through 1997 for this ex post facto comparative research. Using all Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS) scores for grades 3 through 8, economically disadvantaged population data, attendance rates and campus accountability ratings, 12 hypotheses and 4 research questions were addressed.

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