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Alex Honold – Interdisciplinary Journal of Problem-based Learning, 2025
Problem framing is an essential yet under-explored aspect of problem-based historical inquiry. This study investigated how tenth-grade students in one AP US History class framed an ill-structured historical causal reasoning problem. Data included students' written brainstorms, students' responses to open-ended interview questions, and…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Inquiry, History, Problem Based Learning
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Kenneth Elpus; David S. Miller – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2024
The purpose of this study was to investigate the potential relationship between student enrollment trends in elective secondary music ensembles and music ensemble teacher job turnover. Although student enrollment is widely accepted as an important concern for music educators and a crude proxy measure of music teacher quality, these normative…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music Teachers, High School Students, High School Teachers
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Jesse Eze; Kenneth Shores; Vikrant Kamble; Trey Miller – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2024
Background: The landscape of education is increasingly recognizing the impactful role of Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs in preparing students for the workforce. In Delaware, the implementation of CTE programs has been substantial, offering students opportunities to earn college credits, attain industry certifications, and gain…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Vocational Education, Program Effectiveness, High School Students
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Ernest C. Davenport Jr.; Mark L. Davison; Kyungin Park – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
The following study shows how reparameterizations and constraints of the general linear model can serve to parse quantitative and qualitative aspects of predictors. We demonstrate three different approaches. The study uses data from the High School Longitudinal Study of 2009 on mathematics course-taking and achievement as an example. Results show…
Descriptors: High School Students, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Achievement, Grade 9
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Xinxin Sun – Grantee Submission, 2023
Noncompliance to treatment assignment is widespread in randomized trials and presents challenges in causal inference. In the presence of noncompliance, the most commonly estimated effect of treatment assignment, also known as the intent-to-treat (ITT) effect, is biased. Of interest in this setting is the complier average causal effect (CACE), the…
Descriptors: Compliance (Psychology), Randomized Controlled Trials, Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Computation
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Hank S. Bohanon; Meng-Jia Wu; Ali Kushki; Cheyne LeVesseur – Australasian Journal of Special and Inclusive Education, 2024
Schools have an increased focus on implementing schoolwide initiatives (e.g., multi-tiered systems of support; MTSS) to address risk factors related to dropping out. These interventions can involve multiple domains, including academic, behavioural, and social and emotional supports. Although researchers suggest that schoolwide interventions are…
Descriptors: High Schools, Educational Change, Multi Tiered Systems of Support, Academic Achievement
Pinghui Wu; Lucy McMillan – Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2023
This study assesses the impact of involuntary job loss on college persistence by leveraging different job-loss timings relative to a student's college enrollment decision. We find that job loss increases the probability that a working college student leaves college before attaining a degree, but access to short-term credit through credit card…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Enrollment, Paying for College, College Bound Students
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Corinne Hébert; Julie Goulet; Kristel Tardif-Grenier; Linda S. Pagani; Isabelle Archambault – Journal of Education, 2024
This paper describes the nature of home-school value discrepancies perceived by students, and tests associations between such value discrepancies and teacher-student relationships with student generational status as a moderator. Using a sample of 1,551 students from grades 10 and 11, chi-square tests and ANOVAs were used to describe the nature of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High School Students, Grade 10, Grade 11
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Seong Won Han; Chungseo Kang; Lois Weis – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2024
Using the High School Longitudinal Study of 2009, the association between high school exit exams and mathematics course-taking patterns is explored. Exit exams are linked to a decreased likelihood of students taking upward-bound mathematics during their four years of high school. Exit exams are also associated with fewer mathematics credits…
Descriptors: Exit Examinations, High School Students, Mathematics Achievement, Mathematics Education
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Karishma Furtado; Sarah Murphy; Jason Purnell; Odis Johnson; Ross Brownson – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2023
Background: Public schools are among the first civic institution with which many individuals have prolonged, meaningful social interaction. Lessons about the authority, power, and fairness of civic institutions, conveyed through disciplinary and social control practices, may be part of the "hidden curriculum," that teaches students about…
Descriptors: High School Students, Grade 10, African American Students, Discipline Policy
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Zeynivandnezhad, Fereshteh; Asgharzadeh, Nasrin; Fernández, Ramón Emilio – International Journal for Technology in Mathematics Education, 2023
The applicability of digital technologies is increasing boundlessly and so are the opportunities of the end-users, with ample opportunities to embed these technologies in the teaching and learning process. Nonetheless, classroom adoption of technologies, particularly in mathematics remains on the lower end of innovation in teaching and learning.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High Schools, Mathematics Teachers, Pedagogical Content Knowledge
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Wellmanns, Andrea; Schmiemann, Philipp – Journal of Biological Education, 2022
Feedback loop reasoning is an essential part of systems thinking, which includes the analysis and description of system behaviour and regulative measures. In feedback loops, every change can simultaneously represent a cause and an effect. Research on reasoning in feedback loops is limited to investigating students' existing mental models. This…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Science Instruction, Visual Aids, Physiology
Ilana M. Horwitz; Benjamin W. Domingue; Kathleen Mullan Harris – Grantee Submission, 2020
Religiosity has been positively linked with multiple measures of academic success, but it is unclear whether the "effect" of religiosity on academic outcomes is causal or spurious. One source of heterogeneity that may contribute to a child's level of religiosity and his/her academic success is family background. This paper is the first…
Descriptors: Religious Factors, High School Students, Middle School Students, Academic Achievement
Hernando Grueso – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
In this paper, I study the causal relationship between violence and human capital accumulation. Due to a power vacuum left in conflict zones of Colombia after the 2016 peace agreement, large spikes in violence were reported in the municipalities of the country dominated by the rebel group FARC. I compare student test scores in municipalities that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Violence, Causal Models, War
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Cox, Marjolein; Elen, Jan; Steegen, An – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2020
Several challenges faced by humanity, such as the world food problem, migration flows or climate change, are all taught about in geography courses worldwide. Behind these challenges are complex systems consisting of several interrelated causes and consequences. In order to better understand these highly complex geographical systems, a systems…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Systems Approach, Thinking Skills, Spatial Ability
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