This study examines the effects of changing from a five-day to a four-day school week on academic achievement for public schools in Oklahoma, a state which ranks high on poverty and near the bottom on educational quality compared to other states. Yet since 2013, Oklahoma school districts have increasingly adopted the four-day school week in response to less state spending on education. We use clustered-regression analysis and a sample of 1,336 schools from public-use Oklahoma State Department of Education (OSDE) data to examine the effect on the measure, a school’s academic report card score, for those who have experienced the shift from a five-day to a four-day school week over the period 2012 to 2016. This research finds a negative relati...
The primary purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a close reading instru...
This study is a program evaluation of the Kids First program, an eight-week psychoeducation program,...
This study addressed a gap in the literature about the importance of the school context in predictin...
This qualitative study examines current trends in public school district policies regarding social m...
The United States federal government requires postsecondary schools, including community colleges, t...
The research of Mei Jiun Wu (2013) indicates that demographic change greater than 1% has significant...
This quantitative study explores teacher evaluation from a teachers’ perspective through an organiza...
The culture of American education is largely predicated on acquiring the proverbial golden ticket fo...
The purpose of this study was to determine adult student expectations in relationship to educational...
Because many new teachers leave the field within the first five years of their first teaching job, a...
The market for online education is competitive, especially for graduate programs such as the Master ...
This study examines responses to an employee satisfaction survey to ascertain the ability of the ins...
An alarmingly number of students drop out of high school every day; however, the need for a high sch...
Scope and Method of Study:A quantitative comparative descriptive survey research design was implemen...
Scope and Method of Study: This study tested Social Identity Theory by identifying, comparing, and c...
The primary purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a close reading instru...
This study is a program evaluation of the Kids First program, an eight-week psychoeducation program,...
This study addressed a gap in the literature about the importance of the school context in predictin...
This qualitative study examines current trends in public school district policies regarding social m...
The United States federal government requires postsecondary schools, including community colleges, t...
The research of Mei Jiun Wu (2013) indicates that demographic change greater than 1% has significant...
This quantitative study explores teacher evaluation from a teachers’ perspective through an organiza...
The culture of American education is largely predicated on acquiring the proverbial golden ticket fo...
The purpose of this study was to determine adult student expectations in relationship to educational...
Because many new teachers leave the field within the first five years of their first teaching job, a...
The market for online education is competitive, especially for graduate programs such as the Master ...
This study examines responses to an employee satisfaction survey to ascertain the ability of the ins...
An alarmingly number of students drop out of high school every day; however, the need for a high sch...
Scope and Method of Study:A quantitative comparative descriptive survey research design was implemen...
Scope and Method of Study: This study tested Social Identity Theory by identifying, comparing, and c...
The primary purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a close reading instru...
This study is a program evaluation of the Kids First program, an eight-week psychoeducation program,...
This study addressed a gap in the literature about the importance of the school context in predictin...