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Ishtiaque Fazlul; Todd R. Jones; Jonathan Smith – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2021
Millions of high school students who take an Advanced Placement (AP) course in one of over 30 subjects can earn college credit by performing well on the corresponding AP exam. Using data from four metro-Atlanta public school districts, we find that 15 percent of students' AP courses do not result in an AP exam. We predict that up to 32 percent of…
Descriptors: College Credits, Advanced Placement, Courses, High School Students
D'Wayne Bell; Jing Feng; John B. Holbein; Jonathan Smith – American Educational Research Journal, 2024
Pundits, politicians, and academics have long worried about potentially low rates of civic participation among STEM-oriented students. Does studying STEM actually decrease the odds that young people will be actively involved in democracy? To answer this question, we created a dataset of over 23 million students in the United States, matched to…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Majors (Students), Voting, Student Participation
D'Wayne Bell; Jing Feng; John B. Holbein; Jonathan Smith – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
For decades, pundits, politicians, college administrators, and academics have lamented the dismal rates of civic engagement among students who enroll in courses and eventually major in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (i.e., STEM) fields. However, the research supporting this conclusion has faced distinct challenges in terms of…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Majors (Students), Voting, Student Participation
D'Wayne Bell; John B. Holbein; Samuel Imlay; Jonathan Smith – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
We study how colleges shape their students' voting habits by linking millions of SAT takers to their college-enrollment and voting histories. To begin, we show that the fraction of students from a particular college who vote varies systematically by the college's attributes (e.g. increasing with selectivity) but also that seemingly similar…
Descriptors: Voting, Citizen Participation, Institutional Characteristics, College Applicants
Oded Gurantz; Michael Hurwitz; Jonathan Smith – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2020
Younger siblings take more advanced high school course end of year exams when their older siblings perform better in those same exams. Using a regression discontinuity and data from millions of siblings who take Advanced Placement (AP) exams, we show that younger siblings with older siblings who marginally "pass" an AP exam are more…
Descriptors: Siblings, High School Students, Advanced Placement, Gender Differences