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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.
811

Essays on Empirical School Choice

Hahm, Dong Woo January 2022 (has links)
This dissertation empirically studies market design based centralized school choice. Chapter 1 explores the dynamic relationship between school choices made at different educational stages and how it affects racial segregation across schools. It uses New York City (NYC) public school choice data to ask: "How does the middle school that a student attends affect her high school application and assignment?" The paper takes two approaches to answer the question. First, it exploits quasi-random assignments to middle schools generated by the tie-breaking feature of the admissions system. It finds evidence that students who attend high-achievement middle schools apply and are assigned to high-achievement high schools. Second, based on this empirical evidence, the paper develops and estimates a novel dynamic two-period model of school choice to decompose this effect and analyze the equilibrium consequences of counterfactual policies. In the model, students applying to middle schools are aware that their choices may affect which high schools they eventually attend. Specifically, the middle schools that students attend can change how they rank high schools (the application channel) and how high schools rank their applications (the priority channel). It finds that the application channel is quantitatively more important. Using the estimated model, the paper asks if an early affirmative action policy can address segregation in later stages. It finds that a middle school-only affirmative action policy can alter students' high school applications and thus their assignments, contributing to desegregating high schools. This finding suggests that early intervention in the form of middle school admissions reform can be a useful tool for desegregation. Chapter 2 studies the relationship between the popularity of selective exam schools and their academic performance measures. NYC specialized high schools are highly selective and popular among students and parents. Nevertheless, the reason why those schools are so popular compared to non-specialized high schools has not been studied yet. This paper aims to answer the question in the context of academic performance by studying the relationship among three factors: preference of specialized high schools applicants, peer qualities, and causal effectiveness of those schools. First, a unique feature of the NYC public high school admission system enables linking applicants' preferences on specialized high schools and non-specialized high schools and hence jointly estimating those using their rank-ordered lists. Next, it estimates the value-added measures of high schools and finally links them back to the estimated preference in the first step. The paper finds that the additional valuation that students/parents put on specialized high schools relative to non-specialized high schools is mostly related to the higher peer quality of specialized high schools. Chapter 3 develops a method of inferring students' preferences from school choice data. Recent evidence suggests that market participants make mistakes (even) in a strategically straightforward environment but seldom with significant payoff consequences. This paper explores the implications of such payoff-insignificant mistakes for inferring students' preferences from school choice data. Uncertainties arise from the use of lotteries or other sources in a typical school choice setting; they make certain mistakes more costly than others, thus making some preferences---those whose misrepresentation would be more costly and would thus be avoided by students---more reliably inferable than others. The paper proposes a novel method of exploiting the structure of the uncertainties present in a matching environment to robustly infer student preferences under the Deferred-Acceptance mechanism. Monte Carlo simulations show that the method is superior to existing alternative approaches.
812

Teachers' Enactment of Complete Care in Times of Difficulty – and Why the Public Should Support Them

Quek, Yibing January 2022 (has links)
My philosophically informed empirical project seeks to shed light on the importance of a teacher’s caring work in schools and the difficulties encountered in performing this work so as to elicit more collective action towards supporting teachers in their role as care workers. Teaching is one profession where doing good work has been made tremendously difficult by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Nonetheless, long before the pandemic, the working conditions for public school teachers have been far from supportive of the good work that they strive to do. Focusing on U.S. public school teachers and their engagement in complete care for students, my project addresses two central questions: How does completing care in students look like in teaching? and Why should the public support its teachers? “Complete care,” a concept from care ethics that I examine and articulate in my project, seeks to guide care-giver(s) in caring relationships towards successfully meeting the needs of the care recipient, thereby promoting their well-being or flourishing. To show that teachers encounter several constraints in completing care in students, my study draws on a variety of empirical and philosophical sources, including the testimonies of eight public school teachers whom I interviewed in Spring 2021 on their endeavors of meeting the needs of students before and during the pandemic. The experiences of teachers working in a “corporatized” public school environment point to the moral challenges that a teacher could face in fulfilling their caregiving responsibilities to students. In light of the moral precarity that teachers can be exposed to from working in times of difficulty, I argue that the larger social order, where possible, should provide the conditions necessary for teachers to competently complete care for students in schools.
813

Implementation and Administration of Radical Education in Texas: Politics or Reform in Education from 1870-1873

McClellan, Michael E. 08 1900 (has links)
This study examines the efforts of Radicals (Republicans) to establish a state-wide public school system in Texas between 1870 and 1873. Primary sources cover the chronological fringes of the period being examined. This study follows a chronological narrative with the four chapters examining first, educational trends in the southern states and Texas prior to Reconstruction, followed by examination of the Radical system in Texas, and, finally, its destruction by Conservative Texans. The final chapter focuses on immediate and long range results of Radical education. In examining the Radical educational program, an attempt has been made to dispel ideas popularly held by present-day Texans who believe that the Radical school program was simply another "carpetbagger" scheme for raiding the state treasury and building Radical patronage. This paper contends that the Radicals established as good a public school system as could be created at the time, and that it was administered in an honest and efficient manner. The system was destroyed by politicians and a grass roots revolt of taxpayers who had no faith in its methods, goals, or administrators.
814

Factors influencing the redeployment of public secondary school educators in the Northern Province

Nong, Makwena Victor 30 March 2005 (has links)
The purpose of this research is to investigate what factors influenced the rationalisation and redeployment of public secondary school in the Northern Province. The process carried with it a many implementation problems. Stakeholders interpreted the procedures differently Although there were collective agreements concluded in the ELRC there were problems in the implementation as the stakeholders had different objectives. Though the department of education indicated that they wanted to achieve equitable redistribution of resources, including educators, the reality is that they wanted to save money. The unions agreed to redeployment as a means to correct the imbalances of the past and to secure educators jobs. The main factors which influenced the process of redeployment are the need to redistribute educators equitably and the department’s desire to save money. / Dissertation (MEd (Education Management and Policy Studies)--University of Pretoria, 2004. / Education Management and Policy Studies / unrestricted
815

Civics in American Public Schools: State Constitutions and the Right to an Education

Harris, Carissa Joan-Zall 05 August 2013 (has links)
A literal reading of the United States Constitution finds no mention of education.  Because no fundamental federal mandate exists to provide public education for citizens, the Tenth Amendment gives states the authority for public education policy.  Because states have different constitutional standards for education, civics requirements have little national consistency.  This thesis explores the connections between state constitutional provisions for public education and graduation requirements for civics in each state. The research examined how state constitutions address education policy and whether states with language specifically connecting education to the maintenance of democracy required more stringent civics requirements for students to graduate from secondary school.  Further investigation explored whether and how state constitutions in Minnesota and Wisconsin appeared to influence the development of graduation requirements.  Indeed, Minnesota, whose constitution connects education to the maintenance of democracy, had a curriculum policy process far more rooted in its constitutional traditions than did Wisconsin, which had no such constitutional language or curriculum process. / Master of Arts
816

The leadership role of school management teams in marketing schools

Mbonambi, Herbert Bonginkosi January 2006 (has links)
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree MASTER OF EDUCATION in the Department of Educational Planning and Administration of the Faculty of Education at the University of Zululand, 2006. / This study examines the leadership role of School Management Teams (SMTs) in marketing schools in the Lower Tugela Circuit in KwaZulu-Natal. School managers currently face the major challenge of finding innovative ways of attracting learners to their institutions. With at least part of their budget derived from school fees and private donors, they need to ensure solid learner enrolment numbers and good pass rates. To address this issue, SMTs are expected to employ business and marketing principles in their management plans. SMTs are faced with the task of changing educators' mindsets and perceptions with regard to marketing. They are required to inculcate a competitive spirit among educators and create partnerships with industries to attract sponsorships. Furthermore, SMTs need to ensure that the needs of their learners are satisfied. An empirical investigation was undertaken to assess and evaluate the role of SMTs in marketing their schools. Data was solicited from a sample of SMTs by means of questionnaires. Both open and closed-ended questions were used. The following are key findings of the study: • Some schools lack teacher development programmes to capacitate educators to market their schools effectively. • School Governing Bodies (SGBs) are not sufficiently involved in school marketing decisions. • Some schools have not established partnership with business and industry. On the basis of these findings, the following recommendations were made: • SMTs must be tasked with developing programmes to capacitate educators to market their schools effectively. • SGBs should be involved in a greater capacity in school marketing decisions. • SMTs should bridge the gap between schools as education service providers and business/industry as the ultimate consumer of these services, by marrying the business/industry knowledge and skills requirements with relevant school curriculum design.
817

A Follow-Up Study of a Primary Prevention Program Targeting Childhood Depression

Johnson, Norman Chris 01 May 2000 (has links)
Children have not historically been the subject of research focusing on internalizing disorders (i.e., childhood depression), even though childhood depression continues to be viewed as one of the most prevalent affective problem within this population. Over the past two decades, a small portion of that literature describes prevention efforts in public schools. There has been a growing body of literature centered on childhood depression. However, there are only three studies that report on longitudinal findings that have taken a primary prevention approach. The present study was a follow-up investigation to delineate the effects of a school-based primary prevention program. The original study utilized a social/ interpersonal and cognitive-behavioral model incorporated into the health education curriculum of the school. The results of the study suggest that the students continued to report normal to low levels of depressive symptoms at one-year follow-up . The results also suggest that students maintained the social skills gained during the intervention at the one-year followup. In addition, reports of depressive symptomatology slightly declined from posttest to one-year follow-up.
818

Indoctrination in Oregon public schools, 1947-1975

Dodge, Daniel W. 15 July 1976 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to examine indoctrination in Oregon public schools during the period from 1947 to 1975. More specifically, it seeks to define and analyze the assumed changeable and dynamic aspect of indoctrination. The major hypothesis to be tested is that indoctrination has declined in strength during the test period.
819

Neoliberal policies in the public education system: impact of charter schools among minority school children in urban cities

Esqueda, Ana Lilia 08 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / The purpose of this thesis is to find out the impact of neoliberal policies in the public education system, especially the impact of charter schools among minority school children in urban cities. The focus will be the ideologies and practices that shape educational policy and their connection to neoliberalism. This will give a better understanding on how different policies, culture and society affect the life of many generations of children from different minority groups in the United States. It is my intent to identify and explain the different causes of the inequality within the primary education system, how neoliberalism has been institutionalized in the primary school system, and the consequences of the neoliberal ideology for economic opportunities of the American children.
820

Communication channels and the formation of attitudes toward funding public schools

Ratto, Jacqueline S. 01 January 2013 (has links)
This study examines San Joaquin County parents' and guardians' media use, interpersonal discussion and attitudes toward funding public schools. Specifically, it investigated the effect of media use on the salience of funding for public schools and how it may be mediated by interpersonal discussion about local public schools. Data was collected from 513 parents and guardians of kindergarten- through sixth-grade children, who responded to a purposive survey distributed within their large urban district, Tracy Unified School District, a small rural district, Jefferson Elementary School District, and a charter school run by San Joaquin County Office of Education. The survey was used to test a hypothesis and research question. The research found that there is a correlation with media use and parental attitudes toward public school funding. More significantly, however, is that the results indicated that interpersonal discussion is a much stronger predictor of parent's attitudes toward public school funding than media use. This study implies that interpersonal discussions with teachers and school administrators can further problem solving and/or decision-making with parents.

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