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Okunade, Albert Ade – Education Economics, 1993
Analyzes propensity of business school alumni to give cash donations to their alma mater. Estimates a utility maximization model, using logistic regression and survey sample data of 1956-90 graduates of a large U.S public research university. Giving probability is strongly correlated with specific majors, time since graduation, other factors.…
Descriptors: Alumni, Business Administration, Educational Economics, Fund Raising
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Glass, J. C.; And Others – Education Economics, 1995
Investigates the cost efficiency of British universities, based on a flexible multiproduct cost-function model. UK universities are characterized by increasing returns to scale. Returns to scale in research are increasing for the top and middle university groups and constant for the bottom group. Increasing returns hold for undergraduate teaching…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Models
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Abbott, Andrew; Leslie, Derek – Education Economics, 2004
Using a data-set published by the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service, patterns of demand and supply for higher education courses from 1996/97 to 1999/2000 are analysed. Most universities saw a fall in applications and enrolments following the introduction of tuition fees, although this effect varies across institutions and regions of the…
Descriptors: Reputation, Tuition, Higher Education, Enrollment Trends
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Mixon, Franklin G., Jr.; Hsing, Yu – Education Economics, 1994
Utilizes a large institutional-level data set of four-year U.S. colleges and two-stage least-square estimation to affirm the relationship of college student migration to human capital theory. Small class size, college selectivity, successful academic programs, the availability of diverse cultural alternatives, and highly qualified and productive…
Descriptors: College Choice, College Students, Educational Economics, Educational Quality
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Ballou, Dale – Education Economics, 1995
Investigates causes and consequences of teacher moonlighting, using a mid-1980s nationwide survey of U.S. teachers. Estimates a model of teacher time allocation using maximum likelihood methods. Results show that moonlighting is highly insensitive to teacher pay levels. Moonlighting teachers do not appear to shortchange students when preparing…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Elementary Secondary Education, Influences, Multiple Employment
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Bishop, John H.; Wobmann, Ludger – Education Economics, 2004
This paper presents a model of educational production that tries to make sense of recent evidence on effects of institutional arrangements on student performance. In a simple principal-agent framework, students choose their learning effort to maximize their net benefits, while the government chooses educational spending to maximize its net…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Institutional Characteristics, Models, Educational Benefits
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Dolton, Peter – Education Economics, 1996
Describes an econometric modeling of the labor market for teachers in an "administered" market setting in which the government partially controls the main determinants of demand and is very influential in setting teachers' wages. Reviews relevant econometric literature and shows market forces' crucial role. Discusses economic policy…
Descriptors: Econometrics, Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Government, Foreign Countries
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Koshal, Rajindar K.; And Others – Education Economics, 1994
Builds and estimates a model that explains educational supply and demand behavior at PhD-granting institutions in the United States. The statistical analysis based on 1988-89 data suggests that student quantity, educational costs, average SAT score, class size, percentage of faculty with a PhD, graduation rate, ranking, and existence of a medical…
Descriptors: Class Size, Costs, Doctoral Programs, Educational Demand
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Thanassoulis, Emmanuel – Education Economics, 1999
Develops an approach for setting performance targets for schoolchildren, using data-envelopment analysis to identify benchmark pupils who achieve the best observed performance (allowing for contextual factors). These pupils' achievement forms the basis of targets estimated. The procedure also identifies appropriate role models for weaker students'…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Benchmarking, Context Effect, Educational Objectives
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Mancebon, Maria-Jesus; Bandres, Eduardo – Education Economics, 1999
Evaluates efficiency of a sample of Spanish secondary schools, focusing on the measurement model's theoretical specification and the "ex post" analysis of results. Highlights characteristics that differentiate the most efficient schools from the least efficient. Stresses the importance of employing information supplied by both…
Descriptors: Efficiency, Foreign Countries, Institutional Characteristics, Mathematical Models
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Wagner, Gary A.; Porter, Tod S. – Education Economics, 2000
Uses a (spatial-econometric) location weighing variable to examine how starting teacher salaries in one Ohio district are influenced by other regional starting salaries. A $1 increase in a neighboring district generates a $.51 to $.96 increase. Size and distance factors help account for spill-over effects. (Contains 34 references.) (MLH)
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Distance, Econometrics, Elementary Secondary Education
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Borland, Melvin V.; Howsen, Roy M. – Education Economics, 2000
Corrects for potential bias and inconsistency in the estimated coefficient on market competition (among schools) by constructing a system of equations with endogenous expressions of student achievement and market competition. Policy makers seeking to improve student achievement should encourage market competition among schools. (Contains 13…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Competition, Elementary Secondary Education, Error Correction
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Goldhaber, Dan D.; Brewer, Dominic J.; Anderson, Deborah J. – Education Economics, 1999
Estimates a model allowing researchers to determine how much achievement on a 10th-grade standardized test can be explained by observable schooling resources and unobservable school, teacher, and class effects. Although few observable variables are significant test-score determinants, unobservable effects seem important in explaining student…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Grade 10, High Schools, Institutional Characteristics
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Koshal, Rajindar K.; Koshal, Manjulika – Education Economics, 1999
Builds a model explaining the behavior of the supply and demand for education at U.S. liberal arts colleges. A statistical analysis of 1990-91 data for 338 private liberal arts institutions suggests a perfectly competitive market. Student quantity, costs, test scores, class size, and college rankings help explain tuition variations. Contains 27…
Descriptors: Class Size, Costs, Enrollment Trends, Higher Education
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Toh, Mun Heng; Wong, Chai Shing – Education Economics, 1999
Computes rates of return to education in Singapore for 1980-1994, using the cost-benefit approach. Rates of return varied with education level. Although remaining higher than return rates for secondary education, those for tertiary education were declining. Polytechnic education enjoys the highest social/private return rates. (Contains 40…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Economic Factors, Educational Attainment, Elementary Secondary Education
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