Recent Blog Posts
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The Year in Research
Dec 31 20089:13 am EDT -
Mind Your Value Judgements
Dec 19 20087:52 pm EDT -
S.E.C. Short-Sale Ban: Pretty Much Useless
Dec 19 20083:45 pm EDT -
Advice from Japan: Don't Forget TARP 1
Dec 19 20082:31 pm EDT -
Chart of the Day: Money Market Stress Easing
Dec 18 20088:57 pm EDT -
House Price Bubble Deflated?
Dec 18 20085:57 pm EDT -
Where Were the Whistleblowers?
Dec 16 200811:03 pm EDT -
It's Just a Recession
Dec 13 200810:20 pm EDT -
Comparing American and European Unemployment Insurance
Dec 12 20087:46 pm EDT -
Back to Normal?
Dec 11 20084:33 pm EDT
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An 'F' for No Child Left Behind Provision
As President Bush calls for the renewal of the No Child Left Behind Act, a new study suggests that one of its provisions may not have much support in the real world.
No Child Left Behind, implemented in 2002, allows students who live in areas with poorly performing schools to transfer to schools with better outcomes.
A new NBER working paper by Julie Berry Cullen of UC Sandiego and Brian A. Jacob of the University of Michigan finds no improvement in Chicago, where school choice programs were available even before No Child Left Behind, for disadvantaged students who attended more desirable schools.
The fact that these students do not appear to benefit further undermines the likelihood that changes in broad aspects of school quality will radically change students' fates...We cautiously conclude that access to "better" schools is likely to be less effective than more targeted interventions.
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