152 research outputs found
School size effects on achievement in secondary education : evidence from The Netherlands, Sweden and the USA
This paper reports the results of an investigation into the relationship between school size and achievement. The study examined the impact of school size on mathematics achievement in Dutch, Swedish, and American secondary education and on science achievement in the Netherlands. The following research questions were explored: (1) Is school size related to achievement independently of student background characteristics, such as sex, achievement motivation, socioeconomic status, and cognitive aptitude? (2) Is the effect of school size related to any of the before mentioned background characteristics? (3) Does the effect of school size on achievement differ among the educational systems of the Netherlands, Sweden, and the United States? (4) Is the effect of school size the same for different measures of student achievement (mathematics versus science)? Datasets from two international studies sponsored by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement were analyzed - the Second International Mathematics Study (SIMS) and the Second International Science Study (SISS). The findings found little empirical evidence for the existence of school-size effects on achievement in any of the three countries, possibly because school size and curriculum comprehensiveness are not strongly related in these countries. Some useful additional information regarding the robustness of the detected relationships between the five covariates and student achievement is presented
De relatie tussen leerling- en schoolkenmerken en digitale geletterdheid van 14-jarigen: secundaire analyses op de data van ICILS-2013
Verschillen in leeropbrengsten tussen jaargroepen als de basis voor schatting van het effect van onderwijs
Signs of the times:Monitoring the position of Dutch education: the O 8 project, Stage two: digging deeper
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