Educational productivity research has been a powerful tool to determine what affects students' academic achievement and to suggest effective educational investment for policy makers in both developed and developing countries. This research method has attempted to identify factors which influence educational achievement, treating school factors (e.g. teacher-pupil ratio, availability of educational resources, school management) as independent variables and treating educational achievement as a dependent variable. There has been small, but constantly reported, numbers of studies which identify significant difference between the findings of the educational productivity research from developed and developing countries. In this paper, first, I r...
About 80% of the world's children live in developing countries. Their well-being as adults depends h...
This paper analyses the efficiency of more than 6800 schools in 28 developing countries, by means of...
International audienceThis chapter assesses what economists and other social scientists have learned...
Educational productivity research has been a powerful tool to determine what affects students' acade...
A number of studies are reviewed in an attempt to identify those schooling inputs that affect school...
Attention to the quality of human capital in different countries naturally leads to concerns about h...
Most previous research on the comparative effectiveness of schools in developing and developed count...
Attention to the quality of human capital in different countries naturally leads to concerns about h...
This paper reviews recent research on the determinants of educational outcomes, and the impact of th...
The issues raised in the Education Production Function literature since the US 1966 Coleman Report h...
Developing countries spend hundreds of billions of dollars each year on schools, educational materia...
International audienceThe education production function, which economists often use to portray the e...
Education is a key to the economic development of nations. This research investigates the effects of...
The paper suggests that international differences in educational institutions explain the large inte...
This article begins with a critical review of alternative strategies currently in use to study educa...
About 80% of the world's children live in developing countries. Their well-being as adults depends h...
This paper analyses the efficiency of more than 6800 schools in 28 developing countries, by means of...
International audienceThis chapter assesses what economists and other social scientists have learned...
Educational productivity research has been a powerful tool to determine what affects students' acade...
A number of studies are reviewed in an attempt to identify those schooling inputs that affect school...
Attention to the quality of human capital in different countries naturally leads to concerns about h...
Most previous research on the comparative effectiveness of schools in developing and developed count...
Attention to the quality of human capital in different countries naturally leads to concerns about h...
This paper reviews recent research on the determinants of educational outcomes, and the impact of th...
The issues raised in the Education Production Function literature since the US 1966 Coleman Report h...
Developing countries spend hundreds of billions of dollars each year on schools, educational materia...
International audienceThe education production function, which economists often use to portray the e...
Education is a key to the economic development of nations. This research investigates the effects of...
The paper suggests that international differences in educational institutions explain the large inte...
This article begins with a critical review of alternative strategies currently in use to study educa...
About 80% of the world's children live in developing countries. Their well-being as adults depends h...
This paper analyses the efficiency of more than 6800 schools in 28 developing countries, by means of...
International audienceThis chapter assesses what economists and other social scientists have learned...