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Is Seeing Believing? How Americans and Germans Think about Their Schools. Program on Education Policy and Governance Working Papers Series. PEPG 15-02

Authors :
Harvard University, Program on Education Policy and Governance
Henderson, Michael B.
Lergetporer, Philipp
Peterson, Paul E.
Werner, Katharina
West, Martin R.
Woessmann, Ludger
Source :
Program on Education Policy and Governance. 2015.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

What do citizens of the United States and Germany think about their schools and school policies? This paper offers the first broad comparison of public thinking on education in the two countries. We carried out opinion surveys of representative samples of the German and American adult populations in 2014 that included experiments in which we provided additional information to randomly selected subgroups. The paper first describes key characteristics of the U.S. and German education systems and then analyzes how information and institutional context affect public beliefs in the two countries. Results indicate both similarities and differences in the structure of American and German public opinion on schools and school policies. Contains a Methodological Appendix. [Paper prepared for the conference on Public Opinion and the Political Economy of Education, Munich, May 9, 2015. Financial support was provided by the Leibniz Association.]

Details

Language :
English
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Program on Education Policy and Governance
Publication Type :
Conference
Accession number :
ED574543
Document Type :
Speeches/Meeting Papers<br />Reports - Research