East Asian students regularly take top positions in international league tables of educational performance. Using internationally comparable student-level data, I estimate how family background and schooling policies affect student performance in five high-performing East Asian economies. Family background is a strong predictor of student performance in South Korea and Singapore, while Hong Kong and Thailand achieve more equalized outcomes. There is no evidence that smaller classes improve student performance in East Asia. But other schooling policies such as school autonomy over salaries and regular homework assignments are related to higher student performance in several of the considered countries.Education production function, East Asia...
The paper suggests that international differences in educational institutions explain the large inte...
The influx of school-age Chinese immigrant children to Hong Kong, Macao and Vancouver In recent year...
The literature establishes that education drives economic performance, but the extent that education...
This paper examines determinants of educational performance in the high performing East Asian econom...
This study investigates what factors determine students’ academic performance in five major economie...
Traditional models of status attainment have focused on attainment outcomes and have ignored the pro...
In education discourse, east Asian education systems are often portrayed as sleek, modern, and compe...
Since at least the 1980s, motivated, in part, by findings from international comparisons of students...
Today’s centre of high performance in school education is East Asia. Four of the world\u27s five hig...
The present study uses a production function and an alternative empirical strategy to investigate th...
Abstract Education is a lasting process. Academic performance in primary education plays a crucial r...
Using several recent international reports as evidence, this policy brief argues that the extensive ...
The high educational achievement among East Asian nations in ILSAs like TIMSS and PISA is widely kno...
Using PISA truancy and tardiness data to generate estimates of school discipline comparable across c...
This paper examines the effects of family size and family type on student achievement in reading and...
The paper suggests that international differences in educational institutions explain the large inte...
The influx of school-age Chinese immigrant children to Hong Kong, Macao and Vancouver In recent year...
The literature establishes that education drives economic performance, but the extent that education...
This paper examines determinants of educational performance in the high performing East Asian econom...
This study investigates what factors determine students’ academic performance in five major economie...
Traditional models of status attainment have focused on attainment outcomes and have ignored the pro...
In education discourse, east Asian education systems are often portrayed as sleek, modern, and compe...
Since at least the 1980s, motivated, in part, by findings from international comparisons of students...
Today’s centre of high performance in school education is East Asia. Four of the world\u27s five hig...
The present study uses a production function and an alternative empirical strategy to investigate th...
Abstract Education is a lasting process. Academic performance in primary education plays a crucial r...
Using several recent international reports as evidence, this policy brief argues that the extensive ...
The high educational achievement among East Asian nations in ILSAs like TIMSS and PISA is widely kno...
Using PISA truancy and tardiness data to generate estimates of school discipline comparable across c...
This paper examines the effects of family size and family type on student achievement in reading and...
The paper suggests that international differences in educational institutions explain the large inte...
The influx of school-age Chinese immigrant children to Hong Kong, Macao and Vancouver In recent year...
The literature establishes that education drives economic performance, but the extent that education...