Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago
References
-
[1]
[PDF] Pease, Virginia H. TITLE The Comprehensive High School - ERICABSTRACT. This report charts a brief history of the comprehensive high school in the United States designed particularly to highlight those key decisions ...
-
[2]
Is the Comprehensive High School Doomed? - Education WeekSep 21, 2004 · The comprehensive high school was a uniquely American phenomenon. It sought to gather all youths into a single institution that would prepare ...Missing: origins | Show results with:origins
-
[3]
[PDF] The Cardinal Principles Report Revisited - Purdue e-PubsThe Cardinal Principles report promoted a comprehensive high school model for social efficiency, aiming to equip citizens for an orderly, efficient society.
-
[4]
The History of the American High School - Sutori1918 Commission on the Reorganization of Secondary Education This commission was made up of leaders of education schools who favored a comprehensive high school ...
-
[5]
When High Schools Shaped America's Destiny - City JournalAug 1, 2017 · As a result, the comprehensive high school took on the shape familiar to us today. In its early incarnation, it was highly effective at its ...<|separator|>
-
[6]
[PDF] The Comprehensive High School in American Education - ASCDWhereas the comprehensive high school was conceived early in this century as the prototype of American democracy, it was now being viewed as an impedi ment to ...Missing: origins | Show results with:origins
-
[7]
The Traditional High School - Education NextJun 22, 2006 · And the questions today are whether and how much this “comprehensive high school” has contributed to the declining quality of secondary ...
-
[8]
[PDF] U.S. High School Curriculum: Three Phases of Contemporary ...They begin by tracing the historical development of the U.S. comprehensive high school and then examine the curricular reforms of the past three decades. During ...
-
[9]
What is the population of the average American high school? - QuoraMar 28, 2016 · According to the most recent data, as of 2015–16, the average enrollment in regular secondary schools was 979 students. Source: Digest of ...Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[10]
Heterogeneous Grouping in Education: Benefits & Best PracticesSep 9, 2024 · Heterogeneous grouping is an educational practice where students with diverse abilities, skills, and backgrounds are placed in the same learning group.Introduction · Research Supports... · The Dangers of Ability Grouping
-
[11]
How Can Heterogeneous Grouping Help? | Coalition of Essential ...Heterogeneous grouping–mixing students of different ability levels in academic classes, instead of streaming them with like peers in tracks toward class-born ...Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[12]
Departmentalized ClassroomsA departmentalized classroom is where an instructor teaches a specific subject to a group, often in middle, junior, or high school settings.Missing: administrative features
-
[13]
Continuum of Special Education Services | New York State ...The continuum of special education services for school-age students with disabilities is an array of services to meet an individual student's needs.
-
[14]
Special Education: Making Classrooms InclusiveJul 13, 2023 · What is an Inclusive Classroom? Special education teachers play a big role in facilitating inclusive classroom environments in schools.<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[15]
Urban Schools: Executive SummaryUrban schools had larger enrollments, on average, than suburban or rural schools at both the elementary and secondary levels. Urban teachers had fewer resources ...Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[16]
[PDF] the rise of secondary schooling in america, 1910 to 1940The US led in secondary school growth from 1910-1940, driven by factors like income homogeneity, community stability, and social capital, with high pecuniary ...
-
[17]
[PDF] Lessons from Secondary School Expansion, 1910 to 1940 | Harvard ...Jun 28, 2008 · The US led in education due to the "high school movement" with higher wealth, income, social stability, and public college funding. Areas with ...
-
[18]
The Rise of Secondary Schooling in America, 1910 to 1940 | NBERMar 1, 1998 · The high school movement was driven by income homogeneity, higher wealth, community stability, ethnic/religious homogeneity, and high pecuniary ...
-
[19]
[PDF] Does compulsory school attendance affect schooling and earnings?Our estimates suggest that as many as 25 percent of potential dropouts remain in school because of compulsory schooling laws. We estimate the impact of ...
-
[20]
Enrollment in grades 9 through 12 in public and private schools ...This table compares enrollment in grades 9-12 with the population aged 14-17, from 1889-90 through fall 2017, including ratios.
-
[21]
Study finds early U.S. compulsory schooling laws benefited minoritiesApr 25, 2014 · A University of Kansas researcher has found early US compulsory schooling laws produced hidden gains in school attendance and educational attainment among ...
-
[22]
[PDF] Lessons from Secondary School Expansion, 1910 to 1940The group forms an "educational belt" across America. Enrollment and graduation rates in California, Oregon,. Washington, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, Indiana, a ...
-
[23]
ERIC - EJ283832 - The American High School TodayConant's "The American High School Today" (1959) conveyed his confidence in consolidation of smaller schools into comprehensive high schools.
-
[24]
The American High School Today: A First Report to Interested CitizensThe American High School Today: A First Report to Interested Citizens. Front Cover. James Bryant Conant. McGraw-Hill, 1959 - Education, Secondary - 140 pages ...
-
[25]
Total undergraduate fall enrollment in degree-granting ...The primary purpose of the Digest of Education Statistics is to provide a compilation of statistical information covering the broad field of American ...
-
[26]
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965This law brought education into the forefront of the national assault on poverty and represented a landmark commitment to equal access to quality education.<|separator|>
-
[27]
How the School System is Rigged for FailureJun 18, 1970 · Mario Fantini and Gerald Weinstein, who have had much to do with shaping the Ford Foundation's broad program of educational support, cite ...Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[28]
If Schools Had Heeded Their 1960's Critics... - Education WeekJun 1, 1983 · The critics of the 1960's-John Holt, Jonathan Kozol, Herbert Kohl, Nat Hentoff, Peter Schrag, Edgar Z. Friedenberg, George Dennison, Mario Fantini, Neil ...Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[29]
DES Circular 10/65 (1965) - Education in the UKJun 21, 2009 · It is the Government's declared objective to end selection at eleven plus and to eliminate separatism in secondary education.Missing: rate | Show results with:rate
-
[30]
[PDF] From Learning to Live to Circular 10/65 Gary McCulloch UCLFifty years after its initial circulation, the current article seeks to trace the idea of comprehensive education from the 1940s to the 1960s, to understand the ...
-
[31]
[PDF] A (short) history of comprehensive education in EnglandNov 12, 2016 · Labour introduced the School Standards and Framework Act in 1999. Grammar schools were designated as such under section 104 of the Act. Under ...Missing: adoption rate
-
[32]
Educational achievement in selective and comprehensive local ...There are a number of possible explanations why inequality is relatively lower in Sweden, among them a school system which facilitates transitions at any point, ...
- [33]
-
[34]
Three Decades of School Failure in Swedish Compulsory SchoolNov 10, 2020 · The introduction of comprehensive, nine-year compulsory schooling in the 1960s turned the Swedish school system into one of the most progressive ...
-
[35]
[PDF] School choice and segregation: Evidence from Sweden - EconStorMay 4, 2015 · The Swedish voucher system is based upon the idea to give equal opportunities to all pupils: the voucher follows the pupil to his/her school of ...
-
[36]
School tracking, educational mobility and inequality in German ...Jan 1, 2017 · Secondary education is associated with a comparatively high level of inequality in Germany. This has often been attributed to the early ...
-
[37]
The effect of tracking in secondary education on educational inequalityFor instance, evidence from Great Britain, France and Germany suggests that the shift from a selective to a comprehensive secondary school system did not ...
-
[38]
Educational attainment: a French-German comparison - ResearchGateThis documentation analyses the structure of educational attainment in France and Germany. While France and Germany share in many respects similar ...
-
[39]
[PDF] Academic Evidence on Selective Secondary EducationAvailable evidence from England and international comparisons using PISA data suggests that selective education systems widen educational inequality. Selective ...
-
[40]
[PDF] Evidence on the effects of selective education systemsMost studies show no clear advantage overall, but grammar school pupils tend to perform better than equally able pupils in comprehensives.
-
[41]
Reform movement - NSW Department of EducationMar 6, 2023 · The introduction of the Wyndham Scheme from 1962 confirmed the trend towards comprehensive, co-educational high school system in NSW. At the ...
-
[42]
Comprehensive government high school - DEHANZFeb 22, 2014 · By the 1970s such comprehensive schools educated a majority of Australian 12-17 year-old youth, but the size of the majority has been in a ...
-
[43]
Selective schools' long and tangled history with race and classMar 28, 2017 · During the 1960s and 1970s, selective schools fell out of favour with policymakers and many parents. They were mostly replaced by comprehensive ...
-
[44]
Tracking and educational inequality: a longitudinal analysis of two ...Apr 22, 2023 · This paper examines the effects of different forms of tracking on learning inequalities in compulsory education. In contrast to comprehensive ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[45]
High School Graduation Requirements: Core Classes & Credits ...High school core classes typically include four years of English language arts, three years of math and science, and two years of social sciences.
-
[46]
Table 2.13. State course credit requirements for high school ...This table shows 2018 state course credit requirements for high school graduation, including total credits, English, Math, Science, Arts, and Social Studies. ...
-
[47]
Complete List of High School Electives - PrepScholar BlogVocational Education · Auto body repair · Auto mechanics · Building construction · Computer-aided drafting · Cosmetology · Criminal justice · Driver Education ...Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[48]
Complete List of High School Electives - College TransitionsJan 29, 2024 · You'll find below a complete list of high school electives and know exactly what to expect in this important chapter of your high school career.Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[49]
The troubled history of vocational education | APM ReportsSep 9, 2014 · Vocational education was once used to track low-income students off to work while wealthier kids went to college.
-
[50]
How Many Credits Do You Need to Graduate High School?Dec 13, 2024 · On average, high schools require students to earn between 22 and 26 total credits to graduate. At Obridge Academy, we require students to earn ...<|separator|>
-
[51]
50-State Comparison: High School Graduation RequirementsMay 23, 2023 · This resource provides a national comparison of state policies addressing graduation requirements, including pathways, diploma types and endorsements.
-
[52]
Closing Advanced Coursework Equity Gaps for All StudentsJun 30, 2021 · This report examines the patterns of which high school students are enrolling and succeeding in AP classes based on the availability of AP courses offered at ...
-
[53]
What we know about Career and Technical Education in high schoolOct 5, 2017 · However, CTE has been on the decline for several decades. Starting in the 1980s, states increased the number of courses required for high school ...Missing: dilution | Show results with:dilution
-
[54]
[PDF] Trends in High School Vocational/Technical Coursetaking: 1982–1998Based on. SST classifications, occupational education in this report consists of the 10 broad and 18 narrow pro- gram areas shown in figure A. General labor ...Missing: dilution | Show results with:dilution
-
[55]
The Detracking Movement - Education NextJun 30, 2006 · Critics argued that tracking, especially in practice, created greater learning opportunities for high-performing students at the expense of ...
-
[56]
Newfangled 'Grouping' in Schools Looks Like Oldfangled 'Tracking'Jun 22, 1997 · Grouping of students by intellectual ability, or tracking, has been taboo since the 1970's, the victim of concerns about racial pigeonholing ...Missing: comprehensive hidden<|separator|>
-
[57]
The Resurgence of Ability Grouping and Persistence of TrackingMar 18, 2013 · This study examines the use of ability grouping and tracking in America's schools. Recent NAEP data reveal a resurgence of ability grouping in fourth grade.
-
[58]
Tracking and Ability Grouping in Middle Level and High SchoolsTracking refers to a method used by many secondary schools to group students according to their perceived ability, IQ, or achievement levels.
- [59]
-
[60]
The dark side of detracking: Mixed-ability classrooms negatively ...Our study provides important insights into how detracking affects students' academic self-concept and contributes to the debate between the labeling hypothesis ...
-
[61]
Learning-related behaviors, cognitive skills, and ability grouping ...We use ECLS-K data from a national sample of students to estimate the determinants and consequences of reading ability group placement in kindergarten and ...Missing: variance Piaget
-
[62]
How should we measure the effect of ability grouping on student ...Work by Argys, Rees and Brewer (1996)and Hoffer (1992), suggests that tracking creates winners and losers. Students placed in upper-track classes benefit in ...
-
[63]
Full article: Ability grouping and student performance: A longitudinal ...The results indicate that students from high-ability groups enjoyed greater levels of teacher support, which partly explains their higher levels of achievement.
-
[64]
Extracurricular Participation And Student EngagementThis issue brief examines the relationship between extracurricular participation and student engagement in school using data from 1992 public high school ...
-
[65]
Extracurricular Participation, “At-Risk” Status, and the High School ...Apr 1, 2017 · I estimate the effect of extracurricular participation on the high school dropout decision with a particular focus on at-risk students.
-
[66]
The Relationship between Participation in Extracurricular Arts and ...Jun 27, 2024 · Neely and Vaquera found that participation in extracurricular sports and arts activities significantly reduced dropout rates in high school ...
-
[67]
ED354450 - Dropout Prevention Initiatives FY 1986 to 1990 ... - ERICIn 1985-86 two major attendance improvement/dropout prevention programs were initiated in selected New York City middle and high schools with attendance ...
-
[68]
The Impacts of Dropout Prevention Programs - MathematicaFrom 1988-1996, SDDAP provided federal support for local efforts to reduce the dropout rate, awarding grants to school districts, nonprofit community-based ...
-
[69]
[PDF] A Comparison of High School Dropout Rates in 1982 and 1992High school dropout rates decreased by almost 50 percent between 1980-82 and 1990-92, though some groups of students did not improve.
-
[70]
Differences in exam performance between pupils attending selective ...Mar 23, 2018 · On average, students attending selective schools outperform their non-selective counterparts in national exams. These differences are often ...
-
[71]
Consequences of academic selection for post‐primary education in ...Jun 9, 2025 · Multi-level regression analysis, Grammar students obtained 5.5 GCSE grade points more than comparable students who attended comprehensive ...
-
[72]
[PDF] Social selectivity of state schools and the impact of grammarsThe research suggests that grammar school students take subjects that are on average about a tenth of a GCSE grade harder than pupils in other schools. Page 5 ...
-
[73]
[PDF] Magnet Schools and Student AchievementMagnet schools show a positive effect on math achievement, but this is reduced when controlling for student demographics and prior achievement.
- [74]
-
[75]
Stanford education study provides new evidence of “big-fish-little ...Nov 30, 2018 · Conversely, when equally talented students (little fish) are in high-achieving environments (big pond), they compare themselves to their peers ...Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[76]
The Big-Fish-Little-Pond Effect on the Four Facets of Academic Self ...Jul 20, 2018 · How an early transition to high-ability secondary schools affects students' academic self-concept: contrast effects, assimilation effects, and ...
-
[77]
The Good, the Bad, and the Average: Evidence on Ability Peer ...We study ability peer effects in English secondary schools using data on four cohorts of students taking age-14 national tests and measuring peers' ability ...
-
[78]
[PDF] Europe between youth unemployment and skilled labour shortagesIn Germany, the dual vocational training system is one of the reasons for the country's low youth unemployment rate. Each year some 500,000 youths – nearly ...
-
[79]
The story of the vocational education system in Germany - GIS ReportsDec 11, 2018 · Germany is a model of the vocational education system, with youth unemployment of just over 6 percent. France, where 22 percent of young people don't have jobs,
-
[80]
Vocational training reduces youth unemployment, IW study findsAug 23, 2004 · According to the study, the dual vocational training system reduces youth unemployment on average by 5 percentage points in a comparison of ...
-
[81]
[PDF] A Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform* The amount of homework for high school seniors has decreased (two-thirds report less than 1 hour a night) and grades have risen as average student achievement ...
-
[82]
Putting evidence on CTE to work - Kappan OnlineFeb 27, 2023 · Data from previous decades provided evidence that high school CTE programs appear to increase earnings in the decade after high school, ...
-
[83]
The impacts of career-technical education on high school labor ...CTE increases school attendance and completion rates. Students earn extra, especially with computer courses. Advanced non-computer CTE courses have positive ...
-
[84]
[PDF] U.S. and German youths: unemployment and the transition from ...In Germany, a social consensus on the value of apprenticeship training results in low youth unemployment and a relatively easy transition from school to work;.
-
[85]
[PDF] CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION IN HIGH SCHOOL: - ERICGreater exposure to CTE is associated with better outcomes for students. The average student takes 4.9 CTE courses during his or her high school career. In ...
-
[86]
a history - Chapter 12 - Education in the UKIn November 1964, a survey conducted by The Sunday Times showed that 120 of the 149 authorities in England were either undertaking some form of reorganisation ...
-
[87]
Education and Social Integration. Comprehensive Schooling in ...This chapter uses WVS data to test the four perspectives on value diversity that are outlined below. ... During the 1960s and 1970s, the Social Democrats ...
- [88]
-
[89]
Selective schooling and social mobility in England - ScienceDirectWe assess whether changing from an academically selective to a comprehensive schooling system promotes social mobility, using England as a case study.Missing: integration | Show results with:integration
-
[90]
The shift from grammar schools to comprehensives had little effect ...Jun 19, 2023 · We found little evidence to support the idea that either selective or comprehensive schooling improved overall social mobility outcomes.
-
[91]
The new genetics of intelligence - PMC - PubMed CentralOne of the most interesting developmental findings about intelligence is that its heritability as estimated in twin studies increases dramatically from infancy ...
-
[92]
Genetics and intelligence differences: five special findings - NatureSep 16, 2014 · A recent study of 11000 twin pairs found that the top 15% of the intelligence distribution was just as heritable (0.50) as the rest of the ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[93]
Do comprehensive schools reduce social mobility?1 - Boliver - 2011Mar 1, 2011 · This paper investigates the claim that the shift from a selective to a comprehensive school system had a deleterious effect on social mobility in Great Britain.<|separator|>
-
[94]
K-12 Education: Transforming Public Education for a Changing WorldNov 4, 2024 · Globally, the K-12 education system in the United States stands out because of its universal access and affordability.
-
[95]
Averaged Freshman Graduation RateThe AFGR decreased from 74 percent in 1990–91 to 71 percent in 1995–96, and then rose from 71 percent in 1998–99 to 75 percent in 2004–05 (figure 5.1). After a ...Missing: post- | Show results with:post-
-
[96]
public high school 4-year adjusted cohort graduation rate (ACGR)Number of high school graduates is projected by NCES unless otherwise noted. NOTE: Data in this table represent the 50 states and the District of Columbia.Missing: post- | Show results with:post-
-
[97]
A Well-Rounded Education - Center for American ProgressAug 16, 2018 · America's high school students need a rich and varied curriculum in order to be successful in high school, college, and beyond.Missing: undecided | Show results with:undecided
-
[98]
5 Reasons Why Student Choice is Important in Middle & High SchoolDec 21, 2023 · Student choice gives agency, boosts engagement, empowers students, increases motivation, and fosters autonomy in learning.
-
[99]
Spotlight Story - The Harvey Schoolthe ability to adapt to ...
-
[100]
Study Finds That Students Benefit From Depth, Rather Than Breadth ...Mar 4, 2009 · A recent study reports that high school students who study fewer science topics, but study them in greater depth, have an advantage in college science classes.Missing: empirical trade- offs comprehensive selective
-
[101]
Depth Versus Breadth: How Content Coverage in High School ...Aug 10, 2025 · Students who reported covering at least 1 major topic in depth, for a month or longer, in high school were found to earn higher grades in college science.
-
[102]
Optimal Learning Under Time Constraints: Empirical and Simulated ...Apr 18, 2022 · Learners are often constrained by their available study time, typically having to make a trade-off between depth and breadth of learning.Missing: comprehensive schools
-
[103]
Accountability, Rigor, and Detracking: Achievement Effects of ...The authors conclude that if a detracking reform includes high expectations for all students, sufficient resources and a commitment to the belief that students ...Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[104]
Education: Why Those Falling Test Scores? | TIMESep 5, 1977 · The mean score for verbal ability, measured on the SAT'S 200 to 800 scale, dropped gradually from 478 in the 1962-63 academic year into the 430s.
-
[105]
The Achievement Decline of the 1970s - jstor3 The SAT verbal average declined from a high of 478 in 1963 to 460 in 1970 and 429 in 1978, while math SAT scores averaged 502, 488, and 468 in those years.
-
[106]
The Use and Misuse of Test Scores in Reform Debate - RANDThey saw the decline as an indictment of educational standards and practices during the 1960s and 1970s. Some even claimed that reforms begun in the Reagan era ...
-
[107]
Schools' Back-to-Basics Drive Found to Be Working in MathJun 8, 1988 · This movement reflected widespread public reaction against the relaxation of academic standards by many schools in the turbulence of the ...
-
[108]
High Schools Under Fire - Time MagazineNov 14, 1977 · Conservative back to basics” forces rail that '60s innovations have left schools flaccid. They demand a return to a three-Rs curriculum and call ...<|separator|>
-
[109]
Test scores have barely risen since 1970 despite 245% spending ...Jun 22, 2023 · Test scores have barely risen since 1970 despite 245% spending increase ... The NAEP graphs track test scores from the 1970s until today.Missing: 2000s | Show results with:2000s
-
[110]
The Impact of Federal Involvement in America's ClassroomsFeb 10, 2011 · Despite that massive real spending increase, overall achievement has stagnated or declined, depending on the subject. But what of the ...
-
[111]
Ticket to Nowhere - Education NextJul 14, 2006 · The downward shift occurred during the 1970s, when scores fell by as much as 50 percent of a standard deviation. Though they gained some ground ...
-
[112]
'The Bell Curve', Explained: Part II, Cognitive Classes and Social ...May 15, 2017 · This chapter examines the contribution of cognitive ability to the capacity for civility and citizenship.
-
[113]
What the Research Tells Us About Detracking - M-A ChronicleDec 7, 2022 · It said, “The findings suggest that the detracking reform had appreciable effects on low-ability student achievement and no effects on average ...
-
[114]
[PDF] Classroom Peer Effects and Student Achievement - Urban Institutealthough at the high school level we observe a relatively large negative impact on math achievement gains as high ability students get more low-ability peers.
-
[115]
The High Costs of Classroom Disorder - City JournalAug 21, 2025 · Research shows that exposure to disruptive peers can harm students' long-term outcomes, and disordered classrooms contribute to teacher burnout ...
-
[116]
Pushed Out: Trends and Disparities in Out-of-School SuspensionSep 30, 2022 · In 2017–18, nearly 1 in 14 secondary school students (7%) were suspended—more than three times the rate of elementary school students (2%). In ...Missing: mixed | Show results with:mixed
-
[117]
Classroom social hierarchy and associations between children's ...Higher classroom social hierarchy was associated with higher peer victimization across all three operationalizations.
-
[118]
Exploring the peer status prototypes: A large‐scale latent profile ...Aug 8, 2022 · The peer status describes the relationship between an individual and the group, qualifying the consideration received from other members along ...
-
[119]
Learning from bad peers? Influences of peer deviant behaviour on ...This study finds that peer deviant behaviour mainly reduces adolescent academic performance by increasing their own deviant behaviours and reducing their ...Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[120]
[PDF] Achievement Gains from Attendance at Selective High SchoolsJun 18, 2018 · The mean NAPLAN score for the non-selective exam sample is 0.8 standard deviations below that of the selective sample (0.94 compared with 1.76),.
-
[121]
[PDF] Assessing Mismatch at Chicago Exam SchoolsWe evaluate mismatch in Chicago's selective public exam schools, which admit students using neighborhood- based diversity criteria as well as test scores.
-
[122]
[PDF] The Educational Benefits of Attending Higher Performing SchoolsIn contrast to studies on selective schools, several studies have generally found positive effects from attending higher performing schools when examining ...
-
[123]
The Competitive Effects of School Choice on Student AchievementOverall, we found small positive effects of competition on student achievement. We also found some evidence that the type of school-choice policy and student ...
-
[124]
The long-term health effects of attending a selective schoolApr 3, 2020 · We found that people who attended selective secondary school had more advantaged economic backgrounds, higher IQs, higher likelihood of getting a university ...
-
[125]
Human capital consequences of missing out on a grammar school ...This paper investigates the impact of selective schooling on human capital. It identifies the impact of an expansion in grammar school places in England.
-
[126]
Raising the Floor? Genetic Influences on Educational Attainment ...Mar 15, 2025 · Twin studies have indicated that a substantial part of the variation in educational attainment can be attributed to genetic differences ...
-
[127]
The genetic lottery goes to school - PNASIn this paper, we investigate whether better schools can compensate for the effects of children's genetic differences. To this end, we combine data from the ...
-
[128]
ED352520 - The Comprehensive High School: An Historical ... - ERICThis report charts a brief history of the comprehensive high school in the United States designed particularly to highlight those key decisions that make them ...Missing: origins | Show results with:origins
-
[129]
Fast Facts: Educational institutions (84)There were a total of 23,499 public secondary and high schools in 2009–10 and a total of 23,519 public secondary and high schools in 2020–21. ... 2021, Digest of ...
-
[130]
High School Statistics in the United StatesOct 7, 2022 · High School Students Demographics · In the United States, 15.1 million pupils attended high school between 2019 and 2020. · With somewhat fewer ...
-
[131]
National Charter Schools TimelineSince 1991 when Minnesota enacted the first state law permitting charter schools, the idea of chartering has meant educational choice and opportunity.
-
[132]
School Choice Movement: How We Got HereMar 1, 2023 · The first modern private school voucher program and the longest-running in the country began in 1990 for Wisconsin's Milwaukee County schools ...
-
[133]
The Federal Charter Schools Program: 30 Years of ImpactMay 1, 2025 · 2025 marks the 30th anniversary of the first Charter Schools Program grant award to support the growth and promise of charter schools.
- [134]
-
[135]
ESSA and What it Means for School Choice - EdChoiceFeb 16, 2016 · By reforming Title I to give states the option to make dollars portable, policymakers would create much-needed flexibility for education ...
-
[136]
Achievement Gap Dashboard - The Nation's Report CardThe charts on this page show achievement gaps, which are significant differences in assessment scores between two groups of students.Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[137]
NAEP State and District SnapshotsSep 18, 2025 · See one-page Snapshot reports of how your state/jurisdiction or Trial Urban District Assessment (TUDA) district have performed in NAEP since 2002.Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[138]
The “Nation's Report Card” Is Out: Here's What the Results Tell Us ...May 15, 2025 · The recently released 2024 results confirm a long-term crisis in education, with student performance stagnating or declining despite decades of federal ...
- [139]
-
[140]
[PDF] Grammar schools in England - UK ParliamentMar 13, 2023 · Grammar schools select pupils based on academic ability, usually at age 11. Existing schools can expand, but new ones are generally prohibited.Missing: 2020s critiques
-
[141]
What do voters think of grammar schools? | OnwardAug 1, 2022 · Public opinion on grammar school expansion is mixed · More voters want grammar expansion than for selection to be abolished, but public opinion ...Missing: critiques | Show results with:critiques<|separator|>
-
[142]
[PDF] Improving-Schools-in-Sweden.pdf - Education GPSMar 11, 2021 · This report is the result of an analysis of Sweden's context and policies and of relevant international best practices to support school ...
-
[143]
Sweden's schools: lessons from history to build a better futureMar 29, 2019 · The latest vintage of PISA points to a brighter future for Sweden's schools. Average results improved, reflecting at least partly recent ...
-
[144]
PISA 2022 Results (Volume I and II) - Country Notes: Sweden | OECDDec 5, 2023 · In mathematics and reading, the drop in average scores between 2018 and 2022 reversed most of the gains observed between 2012 and 2018: results ...
-
[145]
[PDF] The Long term Outcomes of Early Educational Differentiation in FranceMar 27, 2025 · Moreover, informal tracking in secondary education has an effect on the probability of accessing the most selective path in higher education.
-
[146]
Comprehensive Versus Selective Schooling in England in WalesAug 7, 2025 · Both studies find significant positive effects on attainment of grammar education compared to comprehensives although Manning and Pischke (2006) ...
-
[147]
Inequity and Excellence in Academic Performance: Evidence From ...Apr 3, 2018 · Underlying the excellence/equity tradeoff position is the belief that policymakers need to balance the competing demands of promoting excellence ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[148]
Do selective schooling systems increase inequality? | OxfordWe investigate the impact on earnings inequality of a selective education system in which school assignment is based on initial test scores.
-
[149]
[PDF] The Challenges for India's Education System - Chatham Houseinadequate school infrastructure, poorly functioning schools, high teacher absenteeism, the large number of teacher vacancies, poor quality of education and.
-
[150]
Challenges in access to secondary education in IndiaNov 9, 2022 · The secondary schools also suffer from inadequate infrastructure facilities or its poor quality. Although the situation has improved with ...Missing: non- selective
-
[151]
Educational Inequality by Race in Brazil, 1982–2007 - NIHBy the mid-2000s, primary school enrollment was nearly universal for children ages 7 to 14 of all racial categories.
-
[152]
[PDF] Classroom Segregation Without Tracking: Chance, Legitimacy, And ...Though schools do not track in Brazil, I find that black/white classroom segregation in Brazil is greater than recent estimates from North Carolina high ...
-
[153]
Effect of racial segregation on proficiency of Brazilian elementary ...The results indicate that racial segregation has a direct effect on the black–white proficiency gap, that is to say, the more segregated the school, the worse ...Missing: universal secondary
-
[154]
New UNESCO Report shows extent of global inequalities in ...Paris, June 23, 2020 –A new report published today by UNESCO shows the extent of exclusion in education now further exacerbated by Covid-19.
-
[155]
[PDF] Secondary Education in Developing CountriesMyriad issues are being addressed-for example, whether governments should moderate their response to the rising demand for secondary schooling when the labor.Missing: comprehensive | Show results with:comprehensive
-
[156]
Hybrid teaching after COVID-19: advantages, challenges and ...Jul 12, 2024 · There were obvious changes in students from 2020 to 2022 about the disadvantages of hybrid teaching, the improvement of students' learning ...
-
[157]
How Hybrid Learning Is (and Is Not) Working During COVID-19Nov 11, 2020 · The mix of hybrid learning approaches is dizzying, but schools are learning valuable lessons about what is worth replicating.Missing: comprehensive adaptations
-
[158]
COE - Public School EnrollmentDuring the coronavirus pandemic, public school enrollment first fell from 50.8 million students in fall 2019 to 49.4 million students in fall 2020 and 2021 ...
-
[159]
The Pandemic's Effects on Children's Education | Richmond FedSchool closures and switches to hybrid/virtual learning due to the pandemic adversely affected student achievement through several channels.
-
[160]
K-12 Public School Enrollment Declines, Explained - FutureEdAug 5, 2025 · Between fall 2019 and fall 2023, enrollment fell from 50.8 million to 49.5 million, a loss of more than 1.2 million students, or 2.5 percent, in ...
-
[161]
[PDF] AI in High School Education ReportAug 15, 2025 · Introduction. Artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping how teachers and students engage with learning and instructional processes.
-
[162]
[PDF] 2025 AI in Education: A Microsoft Special ReportJun 24, 2025 · Across the globe, educators are using AI to increase student agency, giving them a greater sense of ownership over how they learn. Education ...
-
[163]
Report: U.S. high school graduates will peak next year ... - WICHEU.S. high school graduates will peak at 3.9 million in 2025, then decline to 3.4 million by 2041, with most states seeing losses.
-
[164]
2025 Post-Graduation Readiness Report: 72% of ... - YouScienceMay 20, 2025 · YouScience report finds 72% of grads feel unprepared and just 35% pursue college, signaling urgent need for earlier career guidance and ...
-
[165]
More teens lean toward alternative postsecondary options - K-12 DiveJun 4, 2025 · Teens' postsecondary plans are shifting, with just 45% of students in grades 7-12 seeing a two- or four-year college as their most likely next ...
-
[166]
School Enrollment Shifts Five Years After the PandemicJul 22, 2025 · By fall 2020, early research found that K–12 public school enrollment had dropped by 3 percent nationwide, as growing numbers of families opted ...
-
[167]
[PDF] COMPARING ED REFORMS Assessing the Experimental Research ...Four RCT studies examined private school choice program participants' educational attainment: two have found positive outcomes for either the full sample or at ...
-
[168]
[PDF] School Choice and School Performance in the New York City Public ...There is strong evidence from randomized trials that some components of the choice environment in NYC, particularly charter schools and the new smaller high ...
-
[169]
How vouchers harm public schools: Calculating the cost of voucher ...Dec 19, 2024 · Many vouchers end up going to students who have never been in public schools, so funding these students' private school expenses introduces new ...Missing: 2020s | Show results with:2020s
-
[170]
Research - Public Funds Public SchoolsIndependent research has shown students participating in school voucher programs perform lower academically than those in public schools.Missing: 2020s | Show results with:2020s
-
[171]
NEW RESEARCH: The Fiscal Effects of School Choice - EdChoiceOct 15, 2024 · A new EdChoice report estimates that U.S. private school choice programs saved taxpayers $19.4 to $45.6 billion through FY 2022.Missing: 2020s | Show results with:2020s<|separator|>
-
[172]
Rapidly expanding school voucher programs pinch state budgetsa figure that could balloon to ...Missing: 2020s outcomes
-
[173]
Full article: Do academically selective school systems strengthen the ...The results show that attending selective schools is associated with some post-18 advantages for pupils who stayed until the end of Key Stage 5.
-
[174]
English regions dominated by grammar schools do not improve ...Aug 28, 2023 · Grammar schools have long been criticised for creating a two-tier education system, and for being inaccessible to children from disadvantaged ...Missing: 2020s critiques
-
[175]
Top high school's standards slip following DEI policy - UnHerdSep 29, 2024 · After the implementation of new admissions metrics, the admission of Asian students declined from 73% to 54%. Critics, including parents of ...
-
[176]
The DEI era harmed non-white students most, yet some states won't ...May 15, 2025 · DEI programs have worsened student outcomes, especially for non-white students, with declining proficiency in reading and math. Black and ...Missing: impact high
-
[177]
Does the amount of school choice matter for student engagement?For example, in some cities magnet schools are choice schools where families must apply and be admitted via a lottery or by meeting certain admissions ...
-
[178]
[PDF] The Theory and Practice of School Choice - Dallas FedThe research from randomized field trials summarized in this paper is reported in full in this monograph. 2. David Myers, Paul E. Peterson, Daniel Mayer ...