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Can Small High Schools of Choice Improve Educational Prospects for Disadvantaged Students?
by
Bloom, Howard S.
, Unterman, Rebecca
in
Academic grades
/ Choices
/ Control groups
/ Cost
/ Cost Effectiveness
/ Costs
/ Debate
/ Disadvantaged
/ Discourse
/ Economically Disadvantaged
/ Education
/ Education reform
/ Educational Change
/ Educational Improvement
/ Educational standards
/ Educationally Disadvantaged
/ Graduation Rate
/ Graduation rates
/ High school graduates
/ High School Students
/ High Schools
/ Lotteries
/ Mathematics tests
/ Minority Group Influences
/ Minority groups
/ New York City, New York
/ New York, New York
/ Operating costs
/ Policy making
/ Population
/ Population Growth
/ Prospects
/ Public policy
/ Rates
/ Reform
/ School Choice
/ School year
/ Schools
/ Secondary school students
/ Secondary schools
/ Small Schools
/ Student Improvement
/ Students
/ Studies
/ U.S.A
/ United States
2014
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Can Small High Schools of Choice Improve Educational Prospects for Disadvantaged Students?
by
Bloom, Howard S.
, Unterman, Rebecca
in
Academic grades
/ Choices
/ Control groups
/ Cost
/ Cost Effectiveness
/ Costs
/ Debate
/ Disadvantaged
/ Discourse
/ Economically Disadvantaged
/ Education
/ Education reform
/ Educational Change
/ Educational Improvement
/ Educational standards
/ Educationally Disadvantaged
/ Graduation Rate
/ Graduation rates
/ High school graduates
/ High School Students
/ High Schools
/ Lotteries
/ Mathematics tests
/ Minority Group Influences
/ Minority groups
/ New York City, New York
/ New York, New York
/ Operating costs
/ Policy making
/ Population
/ Population Growth
/ Prospects
/ Public policy
/ Rates
/ Reform
/ School Choice
/ School year
/ Schools
/ Secondary school students
/ Secondary schools
/ Small Schools
/ Student Improvement
/ Students
/ Studies
/ U.S.A
/ United States
2014
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Do you wish to request the book?
Can Small High Schools of Choice Improve Educational Prospects for Disadvantaged Students?
by
Bloom, Howard S.
, Unterman, Rebecca
in
Academic grades
/ Choices
/ Control groups
/ Cost
/ Cost Effectiveness
/ Costs
/ Debate
/ Disadvantaged
/ Discourse
/ Economically Disadvantaged
/ Education
/ Education reform
/ Educational Change
/ Educational Improvement
/ Educational standards
/ Educationally Disadvantaged
/ Graduation Rate
/ Graduation rates
/ High school graduates
/ High School Students
/ High Schools
/ Lotteries
/ Mathematics tests
/ Minority Group Influences
/ Minority groups
/ New York City, New York
/ New York, New York
/ Operating costs
/ Policy making
/ Population
/ Population Growth
/ Prospects
/ Public policy
/ Rates
/ Reform
/ School Choice
/ School year
/ Schools
/ Secondary school students
/ Secondary schools
/ Small Schools
/ Student Improvement
/ Students
/ Studies
/ U.S.A
/ United States
2014
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Can Small High Schools of Choice Improve Educational Prospects for Disadvantaged Students?
Journal Article
Can Small High Schools of Choice Improve Educational Prospects for Disadvantaged Students?
2014
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Overview
This paper provides rigorous evidence (for 12,130 participants in a series of naturally occurring randomized lotteries) that a large-scale high school reform initiative (New York City's creation of 100+ small high schools of choice between 2002 and 2008) can markedly and consistently increase high school graduation rates (by 9.5 percentage points overall and for many different student subgroups) for a large population of educationally and economically disadvantaged students of color without increasing annual school operating costs. These findings are directly relevant to current debates by policymakers and practitioners about how to improve the educational prospects of disadvantaged students in the United States. © 2014 by the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management.
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