Book Cover

Handbook of the Economics of Education: Volume 3

Contributor(s): Hanushek, Eric A (Editor), Machin, Stephen J (Editor), Woessmann, Ludger (Editor)

ISBN: 9780444534293

Publisher: North-Holland

Hardcover
$170.00
- +
Buy

Pub Date: November 10, 2010

Dewey: 370.973

LCCN: 2007310346

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.20" H x 9.30" L x 7.60" W ( 2.60 lbs) 616 pages

Series: Handbook of the Economics of Education

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: How does education affect economic and social outcomes, and how can it inform public policy?Volume 3 of the Handbooks in the Economics of Education uses newly available high quality data from around the world to address these and other core questions. With the help of new methodological approaches, contributors cover econometric methods and international test score data. They examine the determinants of educational outcomes and issues surrounding teacher salaries and licensure. And reflecting government demands for more evidence-based policies, they take new looks at institutional feaures of school systems. Volume editors Eric A. Hanushek (Stanford), Stephen Machin (University College London) and Ludger Woessmann (Ifo Institute for Economic Research, Munich) draw clear lines between newly emerging research on the economics of education and prior work. In conjunction with Volume 4, they measure our current understanding of educational acquisition and its economic and social effects.

Brief description: Eric Hanushek is the Paul and Jean Hanna Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University. He is internationally recognized for his economic analysis of educational issues, and his research has had broad influence on education policy in both developed and developing countries. He received the Yidan Prize for Education Research in 2021. He is the author of numerous widely-cited studies on the effects of class size reduction, school accountability, teacher effectiveness, and other topics. He was the first to research teacher effectiveness by measuring students' learning gains, which forms the conceptual basis for using value-added measures to evaluate teachers and schools, now a widely adopted practice. His recent book with Ludger Woessmann, The Knowledge Capital of Nations: Education and the Economics of Growth summarizes research establishing the close links between countries' long-term rates of economic growth and the skill levels of their populations. He has authored or edited twenty-five books along with over 300 articles. He is a Distinguished Graduate of the United States Air Force Academy and completed his Ph.D. in economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. hanushek@stanford.edu; http: //hanushek.stanford.edu/

Review Quotes: "The Handbook chapters are incisive. Each one successfully organizes an extensive literature around its core motivations, methodological concerns, and empirical results. In addition to their concise reviews of existing work, they point the way for new research." --William Collins, Vanderbilt University

"This Handbook volume offers a lot. Empirical investigators will especially benefits from its broad and insightful review of the methods used to identify and estimate the returns to education and the effects of school and teacher quality on student outcomes and house prices." --Franco Peracchi, Tor Vergata University

Product successfully added to cart!