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Goldhaber, Dan; Krieg, John; Liddle, Stephanie; Theobald, Roddy – National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research (CALDER), 2022
Prior work on teacher candidates in Washington State has shown that about two thirds of individuals who trained to become teachers between 2005 and 2015 and received a teaching credential did not enter the state's public teaching workforce immediately after graduation, while about one third never entered a public teaching job in the state at all.…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Insurance, Unemployment, Data
Kraft, Matthew A.; Conklin, Megan Lane; Falken, Grace T. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022
We examine the labor supply decisions of substitute teachers -- a large, on-demand market with broad shortages and inequitable supply. In 2018, Chicago Public Schools implemented a targeted bonus program designed to reduce unfilled teacher absences in largely segregated Black schools with historically low substitute coverage rates. Using a…
Descriptors: Substitute Teachers, Teacher Shortage, Preferences, Incentives
John Eric Humphries; Christopher Neilson; Xiaoyang Ye; Seth D. Zimmerman – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2024
This paper asks whether universal pre-kindergarten (UPK) raises parents' earnings and how much these earnings effects matter for evaluating the economic returns to UPK programs. Using a randomized lottery design, we estimate the effects of enrolling in a full-day UPK program in New Haven, Connecticut on parents' labor market outcomes as well as…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Access to Education, Parents, Wages
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Chris Brown – Australian Universities' Review, 2024
T his paper presents an assessment of suggestions in international research and media that the modern construction cadetship experience is exploitative and, on that basis, problematises the growing trend of work integrated learning (WIL) in the Australian construction industry. Field research, aligning with the methodologies of major studies in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Human Capital, Construction Industry, Student Attitudes
Cohodes, Sarah R.; Ho, Helen; Robles, Silvia C. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022
The federal government and many individual organizations have invested in programs to support diversity in the STEM pipeline, including STEM summer programs for high school students, but there is little rigorous evidence of their efficacy. We fielded a randomized controlled trial to study a suite of such programs targeted to underrepresented high…
Descriptors: Summer Programs, STEM Education, Disproportionate Representation, Student Diversity
Adam Shumway – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The three chapters of this dissertation use tools of applied microeconomics to study topics related to education and regulation. The first chapter, "Where Doctors Work," studies how openings and closures of medical schools in the United States have affected the geographical distribution of doctors. The principal contribution is the…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Medical Schools, Geographic Distribution, Physicians
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Robert D. Francis – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2022
Based on interviews with sixty- one working- class men in rural Pennsylvania, this article explores the ways in which rural, working- class men do--and do not--seek to improve their labor- market positions by getting additional education or training, moving, or taking gender- atypical jobs. The evidence presented shows that men are making many…
Descriptors: Rural Areas, Working Class, Males, Masculinity
Brian Heseung Kim; Kelli A. Bird; Benjamin L. Castleman – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
Despite decades and hundreds of billions of dollars of federal and state investment in policies to promote postsecondary educational attainment as a key lever for increasing the economic mobility of lower-income populations, research continues to show large and meaningful differences in the mid-career earnings of students from families in the…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Labor Market, Community College Students, Graduates
Schochet, Owen – Mathematica, 2023
Despite the contributions of their work to the learning and development of young children, child care and early education (CCEE) educators are among the lowest paid workers in the United States and have high rates of turnover in their jobs. In a pioneering effort, Washington, DC has launched the nation's first large-scale, publicly funded program…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Teacher Salaries, Public School Teachers, State Programs
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Taylor, Andrew J.; Perera, Harsha N.; Hoare, P. Nancey; Salama, Mary; McIlveen, Peter – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2023
The Work Volition Scale (WVS) is a brief measure of the perceived capacity to make career decisions despite constraints; however, systematic validation of item responses to the scale is still in its infancy. The present article reports on research conducted to investigate the latent structure of WVS, its invariance across gender, and mean…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Career Choice, Decision Making, Employee Attitudes
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Jennie E. Brand – Russell Sage Foundation, 2023
Each year, millions of high school students consider whether to continue their schooling and attend and complete college. Despite strong evidence that a college degree yields far-reaching benefits, some critics of higher education increasingly argue that college "does not pay off" and that some students--namely, disadvantaged prospective…
Descriptors: College Attendance, College Graduates, Higher Education, Outcomes of Education
American Association of University Women, 2019
Over half a century after pay discrimination became illegal in the United States, a persistent pay gap between men and women continues to hurt our nation's workers and our national economy. Women working full time in the U.S. are paid 82 cents to every dollar earned by men -- but it doesn't stop there. The consequences?of this gap?affect?women…
Descriptors: Salary Wage Differentials, Gender Differences, Gender Bias, Salaries
Xiao Ma – ProQuest LLC, 2021
I combine micro-level data and structural models to study the interaction between trade, innovation, and human capital. In the first chapter, I examine how China's expansion of college education since 1999 affects innovation and exports' skill content. This policy change is interesting because of its sizable scale: the annual quota on the number…
Descriptors: International Trade, Innovation, Human Capital, Foreign Countries
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Nathan Favero; Ali Kagalwala – Educational Policy, 2025
States diverge widely when it comes to education funding choices, leading to substantial differences in how much states spend on schooling, the role of local versus state revenue sources, and relative differences among districts in funding levels. Prior studies have documented that Democratic party control of state governments appears to be…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Educational Finance, Ideology, Resource Allocation
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Grappendorf, Heidi; Veraldo, Cynthia M.; Farrell, Annemarie; Grube, A. J. – Sport Management Education Journal, 2022
Female faculty earn 81.4% of what male faculty earn. Salary negotiation is a critical component of job offers and can have lasting implications for pay during a career. To better understand the salary negotiation process for female sport management professors, this study examined perceived barriers held by participants. A qualitative approach was…
Descriptors: Females, College Faculty, Athletics, Administration
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