14,529 results on '"public support"'
Search Results
2. Mental Health Provider Reach and Engagement in a Countywide Training Initiative
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Brigid R. Marriott, Jack H. Andrews, Evelyn Cho, Siena K. Tugendrajch, and Kristin M. Hawley
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Many training initiatives are underway to increase implementation of evidence-based practice (EBPs) in mental healthcare. However, little is known about what types of trainings and supports yield the highest reach and engagement. Supported by a tax-funded, countywide initiative to improve access to quality care for youths, the current mixed methods study evaluates mental health (MH) provider reach, or registering for the training initiative, and engagement, or participation in training activities, for several EBP training and implementation supports. MH providers were offered free 1) formal EBP workshops; 2) a biweekly learning community; 3) individual case consultation; and 4) confidential online clinical feedback system. To register, interested providers (N = 698) completed a web-based assessment measuring clinical practice information, organizational implementation climate, and EBP knowledge, attitudes, and practices. Thirteen providers, selected via purposeful sampling stratified by level of participation, completed semi-structured qualitative interviews. While the training initiative achieved high reach (66% of county agencies had a provider register), far fewer providers engaged substantially in training. Quantitative results indicated that providers whose professional discipline was not psychology, had higher baseline EBP knowledge, more extensive use of common evidence-based strategies, and less extensive use of other therapy strategies, engaged in more training. Rapid qualitative analysis of interviews expanded upon these findings and illuminated provider, organizational, system, practical, and training activity-specific barriers and facilitators to engagement. Findings suggest the importance of identifying strategies for improving provider engagement in training activities beyond workshops. Implications for future research and training initiatives are discussed.
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- 2024
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3. Green with Envy? Heterogeneous Voter and Parent Preferences for Public School Expenditures and Teacher Salaries
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J. Cameron Anglum and Evan Rhinesmith
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In the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, education policy debates have thrust a heightened focus on the provision of adequate school resources and on educator well-being and turnover, concerns particularly critical for school districts that serve large shares of economically disadvantaged students. In this article, we investigate voter and parent support for school spending initiatives in Missouri by analyzing data from two representative statewide surveys, one of the state's voters and one of the state's parents, focusing on total school spending and spending on teacher salaries. Missouri presents an especially salient setting in which to examine issues of equity in school spending, with below-average school spending and bottom-decile average teacher salaries. In this context, we investigate longstanding predictors of school spending support, including political ideology, alongside new hypotheses, including those pertaining to regional spending inequality and differences between voter and parent constituencies. While political ideology predicted school spending and teacher salary preferences, it did so more strongly for voters than for parents, an important consideration amid heightened political tensions in policy debates. Parent preferences, on the other hand, were more likely to be predicted by opinions of local and statewide school quality. Both voters and parents indicated sensitivity to regional spending inequality with respect to total school spending but not with respect to teacher salaries. Collectively, these findings may inform policymaking efforts in Missouri and similar prevailingly conservative contexts to use constituent preferences to guide legislative efforts.
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- 2024
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4. Juggling Family and Finances: The Financial Struggles and Obligations of Parenting Students. Spotlight Report Brief
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Trellis Company, Niznik, Aaron, Fletcher, Carla, and Barone, Sandra
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This brief explores the unique financial circumstances of parenting students, a population that makes up nearly a quarter of all postsecondary students. We find that parenting students are more likely to report experiencing financial struggles, use public assistance more often, and are more reliant on credit cards. At the same time, parenting students are more likely to have additional caregiving responsibilities beyond their children, putting them at greater risk for financial and personal burnout, which may impact their ability to stay enrolled.
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- 2022
5. Time for the School Choice Movement to Embrace the Culture War. Backgrounder. No. 3683
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Heritage Foundation, Center for Education Policy, Greene, Jay P., and Paul, James D.
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Critical race theory (CRT) and the high-profile projects pushing the radical ideology's discriminatory ideas are trying to divide Americans by skin color and pit them against each other. The cultural fissures are manifesting in education, with heated arguments about curricula and classroom activism. This "Backgrounder" estimates how engaging in cultural issues facing this country could produce important gains for school choice advocates. It analyzes results of a nationally representative survey that asks a variety of questions about both cultural issues and school choice. Overall, respondents are supportive of school choice and strongly oppose social justice ideology. These findings are consistent with other surveys. Moreover, respondents who are skeptical about the woke agenda tend to be most supportive of school choice. This "Backgrounder" presents three important findings. First, that support for school choice is moderately high. Second, that radical cultural critiques of American values are extremely unpopular. And third, that respondents who are unsure about cultural issues are a potentially valuable source of support for school choice advocates. If people who do not have opinions about social justice ideology could be informed about the issues and come to see them as problematic, there are reasons to believe that school choice support would grow meaningfully. [This report was produced with efi (Electronics for Imaging, Inc.).]
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- 2022
6. The COVID Constituency: Emerging Priorities for Education Leaders
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Hunt Institute, Wise, Bob, and Siddiqi, Javaid
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The COVID Constituency, comprising a growing movement of parents, teachers, students, education leaders, and organizations, desires systemic changes in education, rather than a reversion back to the pre-pandemic system. As state and district policymakers consider how they want to use their federal dollars for education transformation, it is imperative that they tap into the experiences and priorities of the communities that have the most at stake. The COVID Constituency seeks to collect firsthand experiences, perceptions, and priorities from students, parents, and teachers, and then translate them into actionable policies that will fundamentally change education for the better. This report anchors this work, providing an initial landscape of existing education opinion surveys conducted since the start of the pandemic and identifying clear and significant public support for bold education initiatives. The report introduces the COVID Constituency and discusses the inadequacies and widening chasms of the pre-pandemic education system; the concerns and priorities of the new movement; and planning and funding considerations for bold change.
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- 2021
7. 2021 Schooling in America: What Do the Public and Parents Say About K-12 Education and Schooling During the COVID-19 Pandemic?
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EdChoice, Catt, Drew, Kristof, John, and DiPerna, Paul
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EdChoice and Braun Research conducted its annual survey to gauge the opinions of the American public (N = 1,209) and school parents (N = 1,238) on topics like the state of K-12 education, their schooling preferences, choice reforms and the current pandemic--to name a few. Both survey samples are nationally representative of those respective populations. [For the 2019 report, "2019 Schooling in America: Public Opinion on K-12 Education, Busing, Technology, and School Choice," see ED600665.]
- Published
- 2021
8. Publicly Subsidized Private Schools in Developing Countries: Lessons from Colombia
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Diaz-Rios, Claudia and Urbano-Canal, Nathalia
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Educational public-private partnerships (EPPPs) promise to increase education access and quality in developing countries, provided they have an adequate design that restricts the distribution of subsidies including targeted programs, centralized controlled enrolment, and accountability. This study investigates the effects of publicly subsidized private schools (PSPS) in Colombia--a type of EPPP program that follows all of these recommendations. We use propensity score and regression techniques to identify PSPS effects on student achievement, measured by national standardized tests. Our results show that Colombian PSPS serve vulnerable students, who are fairly similar to those attending traditional public schools (TPS). Nevertheless, students at PSPS underperform compared to TPS students. Our conclusion suggests that design restrictions may prevent student selection and self-selection, but do not guarantee quality improvement for disadvantaged students at subsidized schools. We also argue that design restrictions for PSPS may not be enough when private providers are scarce or difficult to attract for serving the most disadvantaged population.
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- 2021
9. Resentment and Admiration: Public Opinion Toward Teachers and Public Sector Employees in Ontario
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Chris Erl, R. Michael McGregor, Jack Lucas, and Cameron D. Anderson
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Public opinion toward teachers and other public sector workers is an important factor in Ontario provincial politics. This article uses public opinion data to measure, and identify the correlates of, resentment and admiration of these groups, and to identify the relationship between these attitudes and support for political parties in Ontario. Survey data from over 4,000 Ontarians, collected at the time of the 2022 provincial election, show that Ontarians have greater admiration for, and less resentment toward, teachers than toward other provincial government workers. The data also reveal several factors related to these attitudes, including comparative assessments of compensation and workload, and relationships with members of these groups. Finally, the data show that attitudes toward teachers, but not other public sector workers, are related to provincial vote choice, with negative attitudes toward teachers predicting PC Party support. Teachers are clearly a more salient "target" of resentment in Ontario provincial politics. These findings have implications for educational policy and the tactics of teacher unions.
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- 2023
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10. The 2018 Teachers' Strikes and the Social Construction of Teachers
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Jeanne M. Powers and Wooyeong Kim
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In 2018, thousands of teachers in West Virginia, Oklahoma, and Arizona walked off the job to protest low salaries and increase school funding. These strikes were significant because they were statewide and took place in "right to work" states. We analyze news media articles published in these states about the teachers' strikes for insights into how local news media coverage might reflect and shape public opinion about teachers and teachers' work. Using the social construction of target populations as a framework for the analysis, we analyze news media articles within and across the three states. We conclude that the news media coverage of the strikes in the three states diverged from national newspaper coverage in ways that may have increased the general public's support for teachers and the teaching profession in these states during this period. Our analysis provides insights into possible counternarratives that can interrupt neoliberal narratives about teachers and teaching.
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- 2023
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11. The Role of the Welfare State for NEETs: Exploring the Association between Public Social Spending and NEET in European Countries
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Minjong Youn and Chungseo Kang
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This study explores the role of the welfare state in reducing young people not being in education, employment, or training (NEET)s across 15 European countries. Using data from the Survey of Adult Skills in the Program for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC) in combination with the Social Expenditure Database, we conducted cross-national analysis to reveal whether the increase in public social spending moderates the risk of being NEET at a young adult age, especially for socially disadvantaged young people. Our results highlighted that the rise of one percentage point of public social spending per gross domestic product, including social expenditure on education, active labor market, and unemployment, is significantly associated with decreasing the odds of being NEET. Furthermore, these social expenditures appeared to lower the NEET risk given socially disadvantaged backgrounds suggesting that young people with low educational levels, whose parents have low educational attainment levels, non-immigrant families, and females are likely to benefit given the robust social protection system. These findings suggest that public social spending may be an effective investment in promoting the social involvement of young people from socially disadvantaged background.
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- 2023
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12. Floating Forests: A Citizen-Science Approach to Giant Kelp Research and Education
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Isaac Spencer Rosenthal
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Giant kelp ("Macrocystis pyrifera") forests are icons of marine beauty, acting as critical marine ecosystems with great ecological and economic value. Kelp forests are hot spots for biodiversity and provide myriad ecosystem services such as nursery habitat for commercial fisheries, nutrient cycling, wave attenuation, as well as supporting several industries surrounding the direct harvest of "Macrocystis." In addition to their value as natural resources, kelp forests have high cultural value in many regions, both historical and contemporary. Despite their importance and value, these key natural resources are threatened by a host of drivers, and as a result, kelp forests are disappearing worldwide. These drivers interact across multiple scales, forming a complex system where cause and effect manifest in a series of direct and indirect effects. Kelp is most strongly affected by drivers that degrade water quality, such coastal urbanization on a local-to-regional scale, and climate change on a regional-to-global scale. However, given the high natural variability of kelp forests, these changes can be difficult to interpret at large scales. In addition, much of the public is unaware of the importance of this issue, or worse, has dangerous misunderstandings about the drivers and impacts acting on these floating forests. Many do not consider the strength of the connections between land and sea. In addition to these possible knowledge deficits, Climate change is an extremely polarizing topic which is often misrepresented, both intentionally and due to genuine misunderstandings. The research presented in this dissertation is the result of an effort to study the impacts of human activities (specifically urbanization and climate change) while simultaneously leveraging citizen science to allow the general public to contribute to our project. This relationship has proved to be mutually beneficial; volunteers have a chance to see how authentic research is carried out while providing useful data to the science team. Specifically, I take a variety of approaches to (1) Validate our citizen science approach for scaling up kelp mapping efforts, (2) Test a causal model of how urbanization and climate change interact to drive kelp biomass in California, and (3) Develop and evaluate an undergraduate-level activity that uses our citizen science project as a focal point for increasing awareness of climate change impacts, as well as improving students' general scientific literacy. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2023
13. Strategies for Workforce Recovery in Response to the Current Crisis: A Resource for Local Leaders
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Urban Institute, Loprest, Pamela, Spaulding, Shayne, and Hecker, Ian
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This resource outlines a menu of actionable strategies for local leaders for workforce-related recovery efforts in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and corresponding recession. These strategies focus on evidence-based interventions and approaches which promote inclusive recovery. We categorize these strategies by goal, type of action, and phase of pandemic reopening so local leaders can choose options best suited for their current circumstances. For each strategy we provide a description, supporting evidence, specific actions for local leaders, and useful examples and resources.
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- 2020
14. Politics and Religion: Identifying the Correlates of Support for Merging the Public and Separate School Systems in Ontario
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Davidson, Adrienne, Lucas, Jack, and McGregor, Michael
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This article explores the factors associated with support for a merger of Ontario's two publicly funded school systems (secular and Catholic). Drawing upon survey data from over 2,000 Ontarians, it investigates the sociodemographic and attitudinal correlates of opinions toward school system reform. We find evidence that both political attitudes and religious identities are associated with school system attitudes, but that religious identity--specifically Catholicism--has a much more powerful impact. Our findings suggest that coalitions of support and opposition to a school system merger in Ontario are complex and not driven by a single obvious cleavage.
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- 2020
15. Higher Education Funding and Student Access in the Global South
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Kwasi-Agyeman, Fredua, Langa, Patrício Vitorino, and Swanzy, Patrick
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Globally, the increasing cost of university education, growing student enrolments and weak economic of nations have caused a reduction in public funding for university education. This decline in public funding seems to have increased tuition fees, caused deterioration of infrastructure, thereby affecting student access to university education. In the Global South particularly, Ghana and South Africa, there is the quest for universities to widen access. This is as a result of the perceived association of the activities of universities to socio-economic development. However, funds allocated by these governments to the sector is woefully inadequate. The study reveals that public universities in South Africa and Ghana rely on alternative sources such as fees of international students and non-traditional learners to enhance their fiscal strength but this seems inadequate owing to the financial strain that comes with the growth in domestic student numbers.
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- 2020
16. America after 3PM: Demand Grows, Opportunity Shrinks
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Afterschool Alliance
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The Afterschool Alliance's fourth edition of "America after 3PM" provides a detailed accounting of the circumstances and conditions of U.S. children during the hours of 3 to 6 p.m. and compares afterschool program participation and unmet demand statistics for 2020 with results from 2004, 2009, and 2014. It identifies trends in afterschool program offerings, parent satisfaction with their child's afterschool program, and overall parent perceptions of afterschool programs. Additionally, this report looks at traditionally marginalized communities, including children in low-income families and children of color, to examine opportunity gaps. The need for increased investment in afterschool is especially urgent with the coronavirus pandemic forcing many schools to move to a distance-learning model or operate on a hybrid schedule of in-person and virtual classes. The October 2020 survey of parents found that more than 3 in 4 agree that Congress should provide additional funding for afterschool programs to help provide a supervised, enriching environment during virtual school days. [For the 2014 edition, see "America after 3PM: Afterschool Programs in Demand" (ED611371). Additional funding for this report was provided by the Altria Group.]
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- 2020
17. For the Common Good: Recommitting to Public Education in a Time of Crisis
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George Washington University, Center on Education Policy (CEP), Kober, Nancy, Rentner, Diane Stark, and Ferguson, Maria
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Since the early years of the United States, public schools have been expected to fulfill multiple purposes that benefit the whole society as well as individuals. Now, the COVID-19 pandemic has jolted us into a stranger, harsher, and more challenging future than most would have predicted. Mass closures of school buildings have created unprecedented disruption and have left teachers and school leaders struggling to carry out the most basic education functions however they can. The current crisis will transform public education in dramatic and unpredictable ways. Education leaders and teachers will need to adapt and plan. With children at home, many parents are gaining a better appreciation of the expertise and contributions of teachers and school leaders. Families are recognizing the importance of services like school lunch and breakfast programs. This heightened awareness can be useful in marshalling public support to help schools through the challenges that lie ahead. To support this effort, the Center on Education Policy (CEP) at the George Washington University has issued this report, which draws on the ideas in one of CEP's most popular publications, "Why We Still Need Public Schools," and reconsiders them in the current context. This new report highlights the multiple purposes filled by public schools in American society and discusses why, in this time of upheaval, it is crucial to maintain a robust public education system. [For the report "Why We Still Need Public Schools," see ED503799. For the companion report, "The History and Evolution of Public Education in the US," see ED606970.]
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- 2020
18. Exploratory Factor Structural Model of the Perception of Mobility in Bikeways
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Campas, Celia Janeth Quiroz, Aguayo, José Marcos Bustos, Nájera, Margarita Juárez, Mojica, Eyder Bolivar, and Lirios, Cruz García
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In the framework of policies against the effects of climate change on public health, mobility policies based on zero carbon dioxide emissions have focused their interest on the implementation of bicycle lanes, the bicycle motor subsidy and restriction of automobiles. In this sense, the objective of this paper has been to establish the reliability and validity of an instrument that measures the perceptions of risk and utility, as well as the intentions of voting in favor of electoral proposals and candidates that support the urban sustainability policy in Subject d mobility. A non-experimental, cross-sectional and exploratory study was carried out with a non-probabilistic sample selection of 250 residents of the metropolitan area of Mexico City. From a structural model. The factors cited were found to correlate positively and significantly, but it is recommended to extend the study to the contrast of the model in other scenarios with local elections and mobility policy based on the use of the bicycle.
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- 2020
19. 2019 Schooling in America: Public Opinion on K-12 Education, Busing, Technology, and School Choice
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EdChoice, DiPerna, Paul, Catt, Andrew D., and Shaw, Michael
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This is the seventh edition of EdChoice's "Schooling in America Survey." Each year, researchers poll the general public on a range of issues in K-12 education. In 2019, the polling results are based on a nationally representative sample of the general public that includes 1,810 online and phone interviews. Over time, EdChoice has increasingly cast a spotlight on the opinions and attitudes of parents of school-age children and public school teachers. EdChoice continues to poll greater numbers of those stakeholders in this edition. Researchers surveyed 435 parents who currently have children in elementary or secondary schools, as well as an additional 394 parents who no longer have school-age children. They also obtained completed online surveys from 601 current public school teachers. This year, researchers collected additional interviews from those born in 1981 or later--beyond the general public sample--to obtain more robust oversamples of Generation Z (N = 637) and Millennials (N = 617). Researchers asked their standard questions about schooling experiences and educational choice reforms, but went further to learn how people feel about hot-button K-12 subjects that seem to polarize lawmakers and advocates, including busing, teacher protests, and children's use of technology. Findings reveal the following: (1) Parents' schooling preferences do not match their kids' actual educational experiences; (2) People like Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) best, especially when they are open to all families; (3) People do not know what schooling costs--public or private--but most still think public schools need more money; and (4) Younger generations are most supportive of busing students to schools outside their assigned district, and current public school teachers really oppose it. [The team at Braun Research assisted in project development. For the 2018 report, "2018 Schooling in America: Public Opinion on K-12 Education, Parent and Teacher Experiences, Accountability, and School Choice," see ED600702.]
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- 2019
20. Making Early Education a Priority: Evidence from the 2019 PACE/USC Rossier Voter Poll
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Stanford University, Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE), Plank, David N., and Stipek, Deborah
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Governor Gavin Newsom campaigned on a "cradle to career" education strategy that identified childcare and early education as key priorities. The Governor's 2019 Budget Proposal follows through with the inclusion of several initiatives aimed at increasing support for children five and younger. Despite strong evidence that high-quality early education programs can have a powerful impact on children's future success in school, college, and the workforce, California voters rank new investments in prenatal and early childhood services below other educational priorities, including improving the quality of K-12 education and making college affordable. Building public support for aggressive investment to expand access to and improve quality of early education programs is likely to require more active engagement on this issue by the Governor and his allies.
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- 2019
21. School Finance Moves Forward: House and Senate to Work out Differences in HB 3
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Center for Public Policy Priorities (CPPP) and Villanueva, Chandra
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Now that competing versions of HB 3 have been passed in each chamber, it is up to the House and Senate to work together to smooth out the differences. While there is a lot of agreement within the two versions of this bill, there are glaring discrepancies. This brief describes the discrepancies of the House and Senate bills in the following subjects: (1) property tax reforms; (2) the use of current or prior year values; (3) teacher pay; and (4) student-based funding.
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- 2019
22. Government Spending across the World: How the United States Compares. National Issue Brief No. 144
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University of New Hampshire, Carsey School of Public Policy, Ettlinger, Michael, Hensley, Jordan, and Vieira, Julia
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In this brief, authors Michael Ettlinger, Jordan Hensley, and Julia Vieira analyze how much the governments of different countries spend, and on what, to illuminate the range of fiscal policy options available and provide a basis for determining which approaches work best. They report that the United States ranks twenty-fourth in government spending as a share of GDP out of twenty-nine countries for which recent comparable data are available. The key determinant of where countries rank in overall government spending is the amount spent on social protection. The United States ranks last in spending on social protection as a share of GDP and twenty-second in per capita spending. The United States ranks at or near the top in military, health care, education, and law enforcement spending. Measuring government spending by different methods and including tax expenditures does not appear to significantly alter the conclusion that the United States is a low-tax, low-spending country relative to the other countries examined, particularly when compared to its fellow higher-income countries. [This paper is an evolution of a previous work, "Comparing Public Spending and Priorities Across OECD Countries" (ED606844).]
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- 2019
23. The Power of Relationships: How and Why American Adults Step up to Mentor the Nation's Youth
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MENTOR: The National Mentoring Partnership, Garringer, Michael, and Benning, Chelsea
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With the release of this comprehensive new report, MENTOR: The National Mentoring Partnership has provided the mentoring field with important new data about the scope of mentoring in the United States. This report advances what is understood about mentoring in several important ways. First, it moves beyond a simple head count to explore Americans' motivations for, obstacles to, and beliefs about mentoring. Second, unlike the many surveys that focus on youth's perspectives, this study explores the perspectives of adult mentors (as well as adults who do not mentor). In doing so, it provides a depth of new understanding and a clear path toward fuller, more satisfactory engagement with caring adults. Of particular importance, this report contains the most comprehensive survey of informal mentors to date. Given that far more adults serve as natural, informal mentors, and efforts--by both MENTOR and MENTOR's Center for Evidence-Based Mentoring--to support, enlist, and train informal mentors are underway, this information is sorely needed. [This report was produced with Pacific Market Research.]
- Published
- 2018
24. Examining How College Promise Programs Promote Student Academic and Financial Readiness. Research Report. RR-18-41
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Millett, Catherine M., Saunders, Stephanie R., and Fishstein, Daniel
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Currently college promise programs are proliferating in number at the local and state levels. Most promise programs provide financial resources beyond conventional state and federal student aid to students who live in designated places and meet local- or state-defined eligibility criteria.There is an immense variety of models and funding designs for these programs. In this study, we conducted a rigorous content analysis of the public web sites for a diverse subsample of 35 promise programs to explore how college promise programs promote student academic and financial readiness. Although our analysis made it clear that there is more to learn about promise programs, including understanding general administrative processes and program operations, we highlight several design and implementation considerations that may increase the capacity of these programs to promote equity in higher education access and success.
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- 2018
25. Public Investment in Education and Training in Vietnam
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Hien, Phung Van
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Public investment in education and training occupies an important proportion in Vietnam public budget, approximately 20%, equivalent to 5% GDP. Public investment in education and training has many positive benefits and impact on the economy and society by contributing to economic growth, by improving the national productivity, people's qualification and intellectual level well as reducing unemployment, poverty in a country. On the basis of an empirical analysis in Vietnam, this paper proposes several relevant recommendation for Vietnam government to improve the performance of public investment in education and training by making contribution to ensure suitable investment structure as well as uphold important role of education and training to the development of the economy and society.
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- 2018
26. Education at a Glance 2021: OECD Indicators
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Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) (France) and Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) (France)
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"Education at a Glance" is the authoritative source for information on the state of education around the world. It provides data on the structure, finances and performance of education systems across OECD countries and a number of partner economies. More than 100 charts and tables in this publication -- as well as links to much more available on the educational database -- provide key information on the output of educational institutions; the impact of learning across countries; access, participation and progression in education; the financial resources invested in education; and teachers, the learning environment and the organisation of schools. The 2021 edition includes a focus on equity, investigating how progress through education and the associated learning and labour market outcomes are impacted by dimensions such as gender, socio-economic status, country of birth and regional location. A specific chapter is dedicated to Target 4.5 of the Sustainable Development Goal 4 on equity in education, providing an assessment of where OECD and partner countries stand in providing equal access to quality education at all levels. Two new indicators on the mechanisms and formulas used to allocate public funding to schools and on teacher attrition rate complement this year's edition. [For "Education at a Glance 2020: OECD Indicators," see ED615322.]
- Published
- 2021
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27. Boosting Higher Education While Cutting Public Spending. HEPI Report 142
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Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) (United Kingdom) and Willetts, David
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Universities can help level up by boosting earnings, transforming towns and delivering vocational and technical education. They fulfil the aspirations of many young people. In this paper, David Willetts explores how to boost participation in higher education while cutting public spending. He argues it is reasonable to expect graduates to pay for the benefits they enjoy as a result of their university education.
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- 2021
28. Policy Dialogue: The Problems and Promises of Higher Education in the United States
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Goldrick-Rab, Sara and Labaree, David
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Nearly 70 percent of American students enroll in postsecondary education immediately after graduating high school. Yet college and university completion rates remain highly disparate across social and economic groups. White students in the US are 20 percent more likely than Black and Latino students to graduate, and students from high-income backgrounds are roughly five times more likely to graduate than their lower-income peers. As a result, many students leave higher education without a degree, bearing debt that cannot be discharged through bankruptcy. The upshot is that much of the $1.7 trillion in student loan obligations today is held by those who cannot afford to repay it--an immediate crisis for millions of individuals and a looming threat to the US economy. How did we arrive at this juncture? And what should we do from here? For this Policy Dialogue, the "HEQ" editors asked Sara Goldrick-Rab and David Labaree to explore the past, present, and future of pressing issues facing American higher education. Goldrick-Rab is professor of sociology and medicine at Temple University as well as President and Founder of the Hope Center for College, Community, and Justice in Philadelphia. She is also the chief strategy officer for emergency aid at Edquity, a student financial success and emergency aid company, and founder of Believe in Students, a nonprofit distributing emergency aid. Labaree is a past president of the History of Education Society and the Lee L. Jacks Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. Their dialogue takes readers on a quick and heady jaunt across time, across the country, and across almost all institutional types in higher education. "HEQ" Policy Dialogues are, by design, intended to promote an informal, free exchange of ideas between scholars. At the end of the exchange, we offer a list of references for readers who wish to follow up on sources relevant to the discussion.
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- 2021
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29. Taking the Long View: Options for Inclusive Post-Pandemic Labour Markets
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Migration Policy Institute (MPI) Europe and Patuzzi, Liam
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The COVID-19 pandemic has ushered in harsh effects across European economies, and uncertainty persists even as vaccination campaigns have picked up speed. EU governments' prompt investments in historically large job retention measures have temporarily cushioned the pandemic's blow to labor markets, but this also means that the full impact is yet to be felt. What is clear, however, is that the crisis has exacerbated the labor market challenges some immigrant groups, such as recently arrived refugees and migrant women, were facing even before the pandemic began. Among the contributing factors are immigrants' overrepresentation in hard-hit sectors, precarious work arrangements (such as part-time contracts and gig work), difficulties accessing social benefits, and some countries' temporary suspension of integration supports. This MPI Europe report explores how the pandemic has affected immigrant workers thus far and how labor market trends such as automation, remote work, and the growth of the platform economy may affect migrant integration as European economies begin to recover. It also presents policy ideas and recommendations for crafting inclusive pandemic recovery strategies. [This report was funded by the Robert Bosch Foundation.]
- Published
- 2021
30. Charters and Consequences: An Investigative Series
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Network for Public Education (NPE)
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This report is the result of a year-long exploration of the effects of charter schools and the issues that surround them. Each of its eleven issues-based stories tells what the Network for Public Education (NPE) has learned not only from research, but also from talking with parents, community members, teachers, and school leaders around the nation who have observed the effects of charters on their communities and neighborhood schools. While stories of individual charter successes are well covered by the media, substantive issues surrounding the explosion of charter school growth are too often brushed aside. The purpose of this report is to bring those issues to light.
- Published
- 2017
31. Tracking the Money for Open Educational Resources in South African Basic Education: What We Don't Know
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Goodier, Sarah
- Abstract
Limited research has been done to date on the extent of public funding of Open Educational Resources (OER) within basic education (K-12 equivalent) in South Africa. As claims have been made about the potential cost reductions that come with using OER, this study aimed to establish a benchmark of public spending on educational resources, uncover how much is being spent on OER and assess cost-savings of OER adoption. A desk review and document analysis of official information sources on South African basic education was conducted to develop a conceptual understanding of funding allocations the South African government uses for educational resources. A review of publicly available government reports and budgets showed that there is insufficient information at this time to determine how much is being spent on OER specifically or to act as a benchmark for potential cost savings of OER. This study highlights the information gaps which would need to be filled in order to make claims about OER and their potential as cost savers.
- Published
- 2017
32. A Career in Activism: A Reflective Narrative of University Governance and Unionism
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Bosanquet, Agnes and Rytmeister, Cathy
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This paper examines what it means to be an activist and to do activist work in the Australian contemporary university. In a context of globalisation, massification and marketisation, what does academic or scholar activism look like? In a time of political uncertainty about fee deregulation, further cuts to public funding and changes to the income-contingent loans scheme, what does it mean to be an activist or to do activist work? And what happens when activist attention turns to the higher education sector and the operations of the university? This paper examines these broad questions at an intimate level, presenting a reflective narrative of an individual career in academic activism marked by a long-standing scholarly interest in the nature and work of universities, academic and professional roles, teaching experience in multiple disciplines and involvement in union representation. In this paper, the reflections of an individual academic activist, Rosie, are embedded in a contextual discussion of university governance, regulatory and auditing frameworks, the academic workforce, gender inequality, and learning and teaching in higher education in Australia.
- Published
- 2017
33. A Case Study of the County School Facility Tax Initiative in Mary County, Illinois
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Hughes, Vince L., Reeves, Alison G., and Puchner, Laurel
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K-12 Illinois public school facilities need to be repaired and rebuilt. The County School Facility Occupation Tax (CSFT) was made law in 2007 in Illinois to help provide funding for Illinois public school facilities. This single case study, qualitative research, outlines findings from 86, face-to- face, phone and email interviews and approximately 79 documents analyzed related to the CSFT in initiative in Mary County, (a pseudonym) Illinois. Through interviews and analyzed documents, five themes emerge related to why the CSFT did not pass on Election Day in Mary County in 2011. Themes ranged from lack of collaboration among school officials and use of the CSFT revenue unclear, to a lack of consideration of others, no opportunity for input and distrust of the process. With such a need for new and improved school facilities and the added burden of school funding being such a confusing and misunderstood topic, school leaders must find ways to effectively communicate with and encourage voters to pass school funding initiatives like the CSFT sales tax.
- Published
- 2017
34. The Lift Every Voice and Lead Toolkit: A Community Leader's Advocacy Resource for K-12 Education
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UNCF, Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute (FDPRI) and Anderson, Meredith B. L.
- Abstract
This brief encourages leaders to utilize their influence to help alleviate the long-standing achievement gaps in the education system, because when students flourish, entire communities can flourish as well. The authors want to ensure that grasstops are intentional in their advocacy for black students. The "Lift Every Voice and Lead Toolkit" provides tangible tips, strategies, talking points and resources to help grasstops who are serious about using their influence to make transformational change for all youth. [For the first report in this series, "Done to Us, Not with Us: African American Parent Perceptions of K-12 Education," see ED573649. For the second report, "Lift Every Voice and Lead: African American Leaders' Perceptions of K-12 Education Reform," see ED588631.]
- Published
- 2017
35. The New Kid on the Block: Perceived Contributions and Pitfalls of Private Higher Education in Ethiopia
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Tamrat, Wondwosen and Fetene, Getnet Tizazu
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Over the last few decades, the active promotion of or government acquiescence in a surge of private higher education (PHE) has become a common phenomenon globally. This study examines the specific contributions and pitfalls of private higher education institutions (PHEIs) using questionnaires, interviews and documentary analysis as data gathering tools. The findings reveal that private higher education is perceived as having significant contributions to make in addressing the wider demands of access and gender parity, and local and economic development. However, the sector is equally liable to a wide range of pitfalls related to its poor image, substandard quality, illicit behaviour and prohibitive regulations. It argues that if the current deficiencies of the sector are to be addressed in a meaningful way, more needs to be done in terms of enhancing the capacity of institutions, enforcing the rule of law and engendering public support through improved delivery and image.
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- 2021
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36. Public Support for School-Based Violence-Prevention Programs
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Bloom, Marlo
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In academic settings, suspension and expulsion are common responses to aggression and violence from students. These responses are ineffective at reducing and preventing school violence. There is evidence that violence prevention and related programs are more effective in minimizing violent behavior among students than exclusionary methods and that the public prefers such alternative programs. The current study examined the public's willingness to vote for and fund violence prevention programs in schools. Two hierarchical multiple regressions were conducted to determine whether there was a relationship between people's ratings of the importance of risk factors and type of prevention program, respectively, and their likelihood of funding a violence prevention program and between people's ratings of the importance of risk factors and type of prevention program, respectively, and the amount they were willing to pay to fund a program. The results did not reveal any relationships between variables, but they did show that, overall, participants were willing to pay some amount of tax money to fund interventions for violence in schools. Clinical implications of these results are discussed. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2021
37. Leadership at All Levels: System Alignment through Empowerment in Scottish Education?
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Forde, Christine and Torrance, Deirdre
- Abstract
This article examines the policy construction of leadership at all levels in Scottish education. In the current reforms 'leadership at all levels' is being used to mobilise support around changes to the role of the headteacher and of the local authorities (LAs) to bring about greater system alignment. From a critical policy analysis six themes are reported on: (1) Social Justice Ideology and the Equity Agenda -- Perception Versus Reality?; (2) Mobilising Support for Reform -- Managing Perceptions of the Public?; (3) Mobilising Support for New Governance -- Managing Perceptions of the Teaching Profession?; (4) Mobilising Support for Restructuring -- Managing the Middle Tier?; (5) Mobilising Support for Empowerment and Collaboration -- Leadership at all Levels?; (6) Policy Rhetoric Versus Practice Realities -- System Alignment through Empowerment?
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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38. Adequately Funding Postsecondary Institutions as State Assets
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Koch, Zac and Prescott, Brian T.
- Abstract
Understanding the funding requirements of public institutions starts with recognizing them as state assets with capacity to meet state needs, especially those that disproportionately serve underrepresented, low-income, or rural student populations and adult learners. As policy makers wrestle with resource allocation decisions under unfavorable conditions, they could benefit from an evidence-based framework designed to help them recognize and consider the level of public support necessary to provide for the most basic of institutional funding requirements. Such a framework would offer insights that help policy makers avoid making decisions that contribute to institutions drifting toward fiscal peril. It would also encourage a strategic conversation about which institutions are addressing state priorities and the level of funding needed to ensure that they are able to continue doing so (Prescott et al., 2021). This article summarizes findings from a white paper drafted by the National Center for Higher Education Management Systems for a series on public finance of higher education sponsored by the State Higher Education Executive Officers national association (2020). The paper also proposes a framework for thinking about institutional budgets and their basic foundational costs (Prescott et al., 2021).
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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39. Educational Resource Management: An International Perspective. Second Edition
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Glover, Derek, Levacic, Rosalind, Glover, Derek, and Levacic, Rosalind
- Abstract
The management of resources is a central duty for school and college leaders, but one for which they are often under-prepared. Good, contextual information and guidance are vital, especially as increased marketisation, international comparison and decentralised governance put additional pressure on leaders to manage their resources astutely. This second edition of "Educational Resource Management: An International Perspective" is an updated guide to all aspects of this key responsibility and how they are applied in today's real-world situations across the globe. Following a detailed overview of funding and resource management in public and private provision, the book looks at the criteria by which the effectiveness, efficiency and equity of the management of educational resources may be judged. It goes on to explore cost structures, budgets and the principles of asset management, all illustrated through case studies that draw on practitioner experiences and the authors' observations in a range of national contexts. Concluding with a review of current tensions in educational resource management and pointers towards further study, the book is a succinct yet comprehensive guide for school and college leaders. It will be essential reading for those studying the subject as part of Masters and Professional Doctorate qualifications. [For the first edition, see ED513303.]
- Published
- 2020
40. Investing in Schools: Capital Spending, Facility Conditions, and Student Achievement
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Martorell, Paco, Stange, Kevin, and McFarlin, Isaac
- Abstract
Public investments in repairs, modernization, and construction of schools cost billions. However, little is known about the nature of school facility investments, whether it actually changes the physical condition of public schools, and the subsequent causal impacts on student achievement. We study the achievement effects of nearly 1,400 capital campaigns initiated and financed by local school districts, comparing districts where school capital bonds were either narrowly approved or defeated by district voters. Overall, we find little evidence that these school capital campaigns improve student achievement. Event-study analysis focused on the students actually affected by large campus renovations also generates very precise zero estimates of achievement effects. Thus, U.S. school capital campaigns financed by local districts--the predominant method through which facility investments are made--may be a limited tool for realizing substantial gains in student achievement or closing achievement gaps. [This article was published in "Journal of Public Economics," v140 p13-29 Aug 2016.]
- Published
- 2016
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41. Education in Thailand: When Economic Growth Is No Longer Enough
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Michel, Sandrine
- Abstract
After fifty years of almost continuous economic growth in Thailand, it is now possible to reevaluate the developmental process of the education system. Until now, the structural indicators of education development that have been mainly used are the level and pace of the increases in public expenditure on education, the effect of increasing enrolment on social mobility, and the private and public distribution of investment in education. The impact of these factors undeniably offers a better understanding of the quantitative advances in education. However, the dynamics of the education system nowadays encounter structural limits related to both the integration of what is now widespread education within the social structures and Thailand's contribution to globalization. As a result, the contribution of education to the growth regime is increasingly questioned. The aim of this paper is to use a historical approach to explore this evolution. Theoretical and historical perspectives are combined within a quantitative history methodology, drawing on new time-series.
- Published
- 2015
42. Education at a Glance 2020: OECD Indicators
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Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) (France) and Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) (France)
- Abstract
"Education at a Glance" is the authoritative source for information on the state of education around the world. It provides data on the structure, finances and performance of education systems across OECD countries and a number of partner economies. More than 100 charts and tables in this publication -- as well as links to much more available on the educational database -- provide key information on the output of educational institutions; the impact of learning across countries; access, participation and progression in education; the financial resources invested in education; and teachers, the learning environment and the organisation of schools. The 2020 edition includes a focus on vocational education and training, investigating participation in vocational education and training at various levels of education, the labour market and social outcomes of vocational graduates as well as the human and financial resources invested in vocational institutions. Two new indicators on how vocational education and training systems differ around the world and on upper secondary completion rate complement this topic. A specific chapter is dedicated to the Sustainable Development Goal 4, and investigates the quality and participation in secondary education. [This edition was revised April 2021. For "Education at a Glance 2019: OECD Indicators," see ED615321.]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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43. The Impact of the Covid-19 Crisis on University Funding in Europe: Lessons Learnt from the 2008 Global Financial Crisis. Briefing
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European University Association (EUA) (Belgium), Estermann, Thomas, Pruvot, Enora Bennetot, Kupriyanova, Veronika, and Stoyanova, Hristiyana
- Abstract
In the context of the coronavirus pandemic, and its expected economic impact, this European University Association (EUA) briefing explores the possible implications for university funding in Europe in the short to medium term. Based on a wealth of data collected under the EUA Public Funding Observatory over more than a decade, the briefing focuses on lessons learnt from the 2008 global financial crisis. It analyses the pitfalls of past policy and institutional responses to the global financial crisis, which proved to be ineffective or even risky in the longer term. The EUA briefing presents a series of recommendations on how to avoid repeating mistakes and how to move ahead at a stage in which policymakers and institutional leaders are searching for solutions to the economic recession expected to be triggered by the Covid-19 crisis.
- Published
- 2020
44. Academia Next: The Futures of Higher Education
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Alexander, Bryan and Alexander, Bryan
- Abstract
The outlook for the future of colleges and universities is uncertain. Financial stresses, changing student populations, and rapidly developing technologies all pose significant challenges to the nation's colleges and universities. In "Academia Next," futurist and higher education expert Bryan Alexander addresses these evolving trends to better understand higher education's next generation. Alexander first examines current economic, demographic, political, international, and policy developments as they relate to higher education. He also explores internal developments within postsecondary schooling, including those related to enrollment, access, academic labor, alternative certification, sexual assault, and the changing library, paying particularly close attention to technological changes. Alexander then looks beyond these trends to offer a series of distinct scenarios and practical responses for institutions to consider when combating shrinking enrollments, reduced public support, and the proliferation of technological options. Arguing that the forces he highlights are not speculative but are already in play, Alexander draws on a rich, extensive, and socially engaged body of research to best determine their likeliest outcomes. It is only by taking these trends seriously, he writes, that colleges and universities can improve their chances of survival. An unusually multifaceted approach to American higher education that views institutions as complex organisms, "Academia Next" offers a fresh perspective on the emerging colleges and universities of today and tomorrow.
- Published
- 2020
45. Rationalising Public Support for Private Early Childhood Education and Care: The Case of Finland
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Ruutiainen, Ville, Alasuutari, Maarit, and Karila, Kirsti
- Abstract
In Finland, early childhood education and care (ECEC) is traditionally publicly provided. However, private ECEC provision has increased during the past decade, largely as a result of financial support from the public sector. Drawing on qualitative interviews with municipal decision-makers, this article identifies three frames within which publicly subsidised private ECEC provision and marketisation are rationalised: the pragmatic frame, the government frame and the choice frame. The results show that even though market logics and tendencies seem to have gained a strong foothold in local policies, there is a keen interest in universalism and maintaining public control over local ECEC provision.
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- 2020
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46. How Does Variation in the State's Choice over Higher Education Governance Affect University Restructuring? A Time-Series-Cross-Sectional Analysis
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Song, Sue-Yeon
- Abstract
This study examined the effects of governance in higher education on the changing structures of universities, focusing on three major aspects: the marketization of higher education, new circuits of academic capitalist knowledge, and the quality of higher education. To do so, the study employed time-series-cross-sectional (TSCS) data analysis with random effects models. The primary focus was to conduct empirical research utilizing comparative indicators and analytical tools for cross-national analysis, and to complement existing qualitative studies on the changing nature of universities. The results suggest the following: First, reductions in public subsidies for higher education may encourage higher education institutions to enter into market activities. Second, the results provide evidence that new circuits of knowledge, namely, academic capitalist knowledge regimes, are more highly associated with market activities such as university-industry collaboration and R&D performance compared to public good knowledge regime. Third, the results suggest that quality of higher education institutions is positively correlated with both public subsidies in higher education and university-industry collaboration.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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47. Public Support Grows for Higher Teacher Pay and Expanded School Choice: Results from the 2019 'Education Next' Poll
- Author
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Henderson, Michael B., Houston, David M., Peterson, Paul E., and West, Martin R.
- Abstract
With the 2020 presidential election campaign now underway, education-policy proposals previously at the edge of the political debate are entering the mainstream. Support for increasing teacher pay is higher now than at any point since 2008, and a majority of the public favors more federal funding for local schools. Free college commands the support of three in five Americans. Support for school vouchers has shifted upward, and tax-credit scholarships along the lines proposed by the current administration now command the support of a sizable majority of adults. These are just a few of the findings of the 13th annual "Education Next" survey of public opinion, administered in May 2019. The poll's nationally representative sample of 3,046 adults includes an oversampling of teachers, African Americans, and those who identify themselves as Hispanic. This year, for the first time, the authors also surveyed a sample of 415 high-school students and their parents. On several issues, the analysis teases out nuances in public opinion by asking variations of questions to randomly selected segments of survey participants. The authors divided respondents at random into two or more segments and asked each group a different version of the same general question. For example, half of the respondents were told--but not the other half--how much the average teacher in their state is paid before asking whether salaries should increase, decrease, or remain about the same. By comparing the differences in the opinions of the two groups, the authors are able to estimate the extent to which relevant information influences public thinking on teacher pay. This essay reports and interprets the poll's major findings.
- Published
- 2020
48. Funding for Small-to-Medium Art Music Organisations in Brisbane (Queensland, Australia): A Case Study
- Author
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Tong, Kirsten
- Abstract
When discussing any livelihood, a key consideration is monetary support. This is of particular concern for music livelihoods, as many art music organisations rely on external sources of funding. As both public and private funding levels are influenced by myriad factors and thus often change, this case study has been undertaken to investigate and document the current funding environment for small-to-medium art music organisations in Brisbane. As a result of historical, organisational, physical, and public financial factors, the city of Brisbane has developed a particular cultural milieu which has resulted in a two-tiered musical workforce characterised by the level of support and opportunity available. A defining part of this is that small-to-medium organisations suffer low and fluctuating levels of public funding. These organisations may thus benefit significantly from seeking private support. Philanthropic practices with art music organisations in Australia are little studied, and the use of generalised cultivation strategies may have detrimental effects. The COVID-19 pandemic has further highlighted the importance of private funding for the survival of art music organisations, and this lends additional urgency to undertaking research into philanthropy with small-to-medium art music organisations as it is specific to Brisbane.
- Published
- 2020
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49. A National Study of the Financial Implications of Community College Baccalaureate Adoption
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Ortagus, Justin C. and Hu, Xiaodan
- Abstract
Community college baccalaureate (CCB) degree programs have become increasingly popular in recent years, with over 100 community colleges in 24 states currently offering at least one bachelor's degree program. Despite the growing prevalence of CCB degree programs, the financial implications of CCB adoption remain largely unknown. This study leverages a novel national dataset and employs a difference-in-differences regression approach to examine the relationship between CCB adoption and multiple indicators of institutional revenue and financial priorities. We find that CCB adoption is associated with decreases in community colleges' reliance on public funds and increases in their reliance on tuition and fees.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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50. Public Expenditure Review of the Education Sector in the Democratic Republic of Congo: An Efficiency, Effectiveness, and Equity Analysis. Report No. ACS14542
- Author
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World Bank and Bollag, Burton
- Abstract
A sound education sector is fundamental for the economic, social, and political transformation of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The DRC has achieved significant progress in its education sector over the last decade, demonstrating strong resilience following a particularly violent period in its history. The DRC's development trajectory will depend on its ability to reap the benefits of it resource-rich territory, which will require large investments in human capital to transition to an economy based on improved productivity, innovation, and technology. The DRC's population has a very large youth cohort and reaping the benefits of the demographic dividend requires ensuring that sufficient funding is allocated to address priority issues at all levels of education. The three tenets of education investments can be summarized as follows: invest early, invest smartly, and invest for all. This report is organized into following sections: section one gives introduction, section two discusses the country context in terms of demographic dividends and available fiscal space for increasing social sector demand. Section three provides an overview of the education sector context including a chronological order of education sector policies, goals, priorities, and structure. Section four analyzes key indicators of education sector performance. Section five analyzes education sector financing including budget framework and process, the key actors, sources of funding, trends of public expenditure, budget allocation and execution, equity, affordability, and unit cost analyses. Section six examines education sector management issues focusing on efficiency and effectiveness of resources utilization. Section seven presents summary of main findings and policy recommendations. The annex section is divided into four segments including a methodological note, supporting tables, figures, and boxes for the sections. ["The Public Expenditure Review (PER) of the Education Sector in the Democratic Republic of Congo" was prepared by a World Bank Group team consisting of Kebede Feda, Tanya Savrimootoo, Élisé Wendlassida Miningou, and Sabiti Kalindula. This report was translated into French by Aude DiPaolantonio.]
- Published
- 2015
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