30,808 research outputs found

    Practice What You Preach: Power, Paternalism, and the Christian Lawyer for the Poor

    Get PDF
    This Essay will focus on the approach a Christian poverty lawyer can take to answering these questions. This Essay will argue that because a lawyer\u27s actions are ultimately based on what she believes about herself and her place in the world, the Christian lawyer will begin her move away from paternalism and towards power-sharing. She will do this by embracing a Christian self-understanding and integrating that understanding into her work in the most significant ways possible. Further, when she looks at power itself through a biblical lens, the Christian poverty lawyer sees a framework for practice that is radically different from that which her lawyer\u27s training instilled in her. Yet, that framework is attainable and sustainable because of its roots in her deepest beliefs. In short, when the Christian lawyer practices what she preaches, she finds the resources necessary to relate to her client in accordance with her, and the profession\u27s, highest aspirations

    Teachers'salaries and professional profile in Mexico

    Get PDF
    Teachers'salaries have often been highlighted as an important issue in discussionson school improvement. The level and structure of teacher remuneration affect morale and the ability to focus on and devote adequate time to teaching. The author examines who teachers are, whether teachers are underpaid, and whether teachers face higher compensation uncertainty than their counterparts face. The results show that teachers in basic education consistently work fewer hours than their occupational counterparts. Regression analysis shows that teachers in basic public schools are better paid early in their professional lives than are other comparable individuals. Because retirement benefits are usually generous, teachers stay within the profession.Girls'Education,Public Health Promotion,Primary Education,Gender and Education,Teaching and Learning,Teaching and Learning,Primary Education,Gender and Education,Girls Education,ICT Policy and Strategies

    Learning outcomes and school cost-effectiveness in Mexico : the PARE program

    Get PDF
    Past research often attributed most differences in student learning to socioeconomic factors, implying that the potential for direct educational interventions to reduce learning inequality was limited. The author shows that learning achievement can be improved through appropriately designed and reasonably well-implemented interventions. The author studies the impact of the Programa para Abatir el Rezago Educativo (PARE), a program designed to improve the quality and efficiency of primary education in four Mexican states by improving school resources. The PARE program increased learning achievement in rural and native schools, where students had typically not performed as well as other students (in Spanish). Not only did students'cognitive abilities improve under the PARE program, but the probability of their continuing in school improved. In rural areas where the PARE design was fully implemented, test scores for the average student increased considerably. A 30 percent deficit in test scores among rural students could be overcome by roughly doubling the resources allocated per student.Primary Education,Teaching and Learning,Public Health Promotion,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Gender and Education,Teaching and Learning,Gender and Education,Primary Education,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Educational Sciences

    Evaluation of National School for Professional Technology Education in Mexico

    Get PDF
    The National School for Professional Technology Education (CONALEP) is Mexico's largest and oldest technical education system. CONALEP serves low-income students at the upper-secondary school level in Mexico. The labor market performance of CONALEP graduates has been evaluated four times in the past. These evaluations have yielded encouraging results, showing that CONALEP's graduates find jobs faster and earn higher wages than similar"control"groups. In contrast, using non-experimental methods, this paper suggests that CONALEP's graduates might earn higher wages but do not find jobs faster compared with control groups.Teaching and Learning,Gender and Education,Primary Education,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Girls Education

    A duration analysis of CONALEP (Mexico's National Technical Professional School)

    Get PDF
    Mexico's National Technical Professional School (Colegio Nacional de Educaci?n Profesional T?cnica, CONALEP) is the largest technical education system in the country. CONALEP serves low-income students at the upper-secondary school level in Mexico. Using graduate tracer surveys from CONALEP, the author analyzes the impact of modular courses and reform programs implemented by CONALEP in 1991-92 on CONALEP graduates'labor market outcomes. Results indicate that graduates from the pre-reform program had to search longer for a job compared with those of the post-reform program. Graduates from the post-reform program have 45 percent higher probability of finding a job than those from the pre-reform program. However, the pre-reform program cohorts earned higher hourly wages than those from the post-reform program.Girls'Education,Teaching and Learning,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Public Health Promotion,Primary Education,Teaching and Learning,Gender and Education,Primary Education,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Girls Education

    Determinants of technology adoption in Mexico

    Get PDF
    The author tries to identify the impact of firm-, region-, and industry-specific characteristics on technology adoption by Mexican firms. Cross-sectional and panel data from 1992-99 show that the firms most likely to adopt new technology are large, train workers, have highly skilled workers, are near the U.S. border, and are owned by foreign entities. Also, bigger firms, firms with a large share of highly skilled workers, and firms that train workers, use intensively more complex technologies in their production process.ICT Policy and Strategies,Agricultural Research,General Technology,Environmental Economics&Policies,Curriculum&Instruction,ICT Policy and Strategies,Agricultural Research,Environmental Economics&Policies,General Technology,Curriculum&Instruction

    Wages and productivity in Mexican manufacturing

    Get PDF
    The author identifies the determinants of wages and productivity in Mexico over time using national representative linked employer-employee databases from the manufacturing sector. She shows that both employers and employees are benefiting from investments in education, training, work experience, foreign research and development, and openness after the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Additional years of schooling have a higher impact on wages and productivity after NAFTA than before. Endogenous training effects are larger for productivity than for wages, suggesting that the employers share the costs and returns to training. The author also finds that investment in human capital magnifies technology-driven productivity gains. By comparing four regions of Mexico-north, center, south, and Mexico City-regional wage and productivity gaps are found to have increased over time.Poverty Impact Evaluation,Economic Theory&Research,Environmental Economics&Policies,Labor Policies,Banks&Banking Reform,Economic Theory&Research,Environmental Economics&Policies,Banks&Banking Reform,Poverty Impact Evaluation,Municipal Financial Management

    School attendance and child labor in Ecuador

    Get PDF
    The author uses the Ecuador Living Standards and Measurement Surveys (LSMS 1998 and 1999) to analyze the characteristics and determinants of child labor and schooling. She shows how interventions at the level of adults affect child labor and school enrollment. For example, an employment policy encouraging employment in the formal modern sector reduces child labor and increases schooling. In rural areas, a wage policy (increase in the wage of the household head) has positive implications for the children, while it is less effective in urban areas.Public Health Promotion,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Primary Education,Early Childhood Development,Children and Youth,Street Children,Youth and Governance,Children and Youth,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Gender and Education
    • …
    corecore