Tesi sul tema "School choice"
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Henderson, Brian. "Parental choice of school". Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/23984.
Testo completoWilliams, Barika X. (Barika Xaviera). "Planning for school choice". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/59771.
Testo completoCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 66-71).
The image of the picturesque urban schoolhouse is increasingly becoming a thing of the past. City schools were viewed with fear or disdain. The urban school's image shifted to an unruly coop for 'dangerous' unteachable students. This stark juxtaposition reflects the gradual transition in the urban environment. Charter schools have emerged as a relatively new component available to meet urban families' education needs and provide a new image of the city school, yet to be formed. Planning has largely failed to acknowledge or address the changing urban education environment. We continue to plan our cities with the assumption of the old image of the neighborhood schoolhouse. However, through charter schools, the urban education environment is being redefined. This thesis analyzes the educational environment of students and school location in Washington, DC to assess to what extent charter schools revitalize the possibility of obtaining high quality, neighborhood schools. Through analysis of quantitative data, I compare three factors between neighborhood schools and area charter school options: student population characteristics, school academic results, and student mobility and access to the school. The analysis identifies three distinct school systems within the city, each with a different role for charter school. I suggest how urban planners might respond to city's new educational environment in order to repair the links between schools and neighborhoods.
by Barika X Williams.
M.C.P.
Damera, Vijay Kumar. "Essays on school choice". Thesis, University of Oxford, 2018. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:4d713003-6586-4d40-9b60-41c794544bed.
Testo completoDavis, Casi G. (Casi Gail). "Public School Choice : An Impact Assessment". Thesis, University of North Texas, 1995. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc279193/.
Testo completoSzombathova, Slavka. "Optimizing school choice conjoint analysis of parent preferences /". Access to citation, abstract and download form provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company; downloadable PDF file 1.04Mb, 161p, 2005. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:1428207.
Testo completoFarrie, Danielle C. "School Choice and Segregation: How Race Influences Choices and the Consequences for Neighborhood Public Schools". Diss., Temple University Libraries, 2008. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/8656.
Testo completoPh.D.
This dissertation examines the relationship between school choice and race. I examine whether the racial composition of schools influences choices and whether choices of private and public choice schools lead to greater segregation and stratification in neighborhood schools. I improve on existing research by adopting the theoretical framework used in neighborhood preferences literature to distinguish between race and race-associated reasons as motivations for avoiding racially integrating schools. This study utilizes geocoded data from the Philadelphia Area Study (PAS) and elementary school catchment maps to examine families' preferences and behaviors in the context of the actual conditions of their assigned schools. Catchment maps are integrated with Census data to determine whether choice schools have a role in white flight and segregation and stratification in neighborhood schools. The findings suggest that families are most likely to avoid neighborhood schools with high proportions of racial minorities. However, attitudes regarding racial climates are more consistent predictors of preferences than the actual racial composition of local schools. Highly segregated neighborhood schools satisfy families who desire racially homogeneous school climates, as do private schools. Families who seek diverse environments are more likely to look to charter and magnet schools. The white flight analysis shows that whites are more likely to leave schools that have modest proportions of black students, and less likely to leave schools that are already integrated. These results suggest that whites react especially strongly to schools with low levels of integration, and those who remain in the few racially balanced schools do so out of a preference for diversity or because they do not have the resources to leave. Public choice schools spur white flight in urban areas, but actually reduce flight in suburban schools. Finally, I find that choice schools do not uniformly affect the degree to which racial groups are spatially segregated from whites, and they also do not uniformly affect the degree to which racial groups attend more or less disadvantaged schools than whites. This suggests that segregation and stratification are two distinct aspects of racial inequality and should be considered separately when evaluating the effectiveness of choice programs.
Temple University--Theses
Wikeley, Felicity Jane. "Parental choice of primary school". Thesis, University of Exeter, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.244957.
Testo completoMartin, Michael. "School Choice and Teacher Efficacy". Ashland University / OhioLINK, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ashland1365258175.
Testo completoJessee, Hazel H. "An overview of school choice". Diss., This resource online, 1993. http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05042006-164533/.
Testo completoCastillo, Quintana Martín Pablo. "School choice with random assignments". Tesis, Universidad de Chile, 2017. http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/145181.
Testo completoEl objetivo de este trabajo es estudiar el problema de asignación escolar como uno de asignación probabilística y poder entender como diversos mecanismos de asignación escolar se desempeñan en términos de las probabilidades que le asignan a los alumnos de poder acceder a los colegios. Para éste fin se asume que el planificador central determina una función que les permite generar preferencias sobre loterías desde preferencias ordinales por los colegios, estás funciones se denominan extensiones. Se elabora una nueva noción de equidad (estabilidad) la cual generaliza nociones previas tanto en la literatura de asignación escolar como en la de asignación probabilística. El resultado principal de éste trabajo corresponde a la caracterización, bajo supuestos razonables en las preferencias, del conjunto de asignaciones probabilísticas estables. También se desarrollan nuevos resultados de existencia de asignaciones probabilísticas estables y eficientes, se presentan resultados de mecanismos probabilísticos compatibles en incentivos y se evalúan los mecanismos de asignación escolar Boston, Deferred Acceptance, Top Trading Cycles y Fraction Deferred Acceptance en términos de eficiencia, estabilidad e incentivos.
Este trabajo ha sido parcialmente financiado por MIPP
Aris, Sharon Margaret. "Understanding school choice: what parents prioritise in high schools". Thesis, University of Sydney, 2020. https://hdl.handle.net/2123/22995.
Testo completoMills, Jason Daniel. "School choice in America and Indiana?s Choice Scholarship Program". Thesis, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, 2017. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10249522.
Testo completoThis is a comprehensive study researching the existence of school choice programs in the country, concentrating on the Indian School Voucher program. Data was collected by examining existing case law, surveys and scholarly papers. The school choice programs in all 50 states and the District of Columbia was examined. Each state program was listed and any legal challenges associated with each program was identified. Further, the K-12 & School Choice Survey conducted by the Friedman Foundation in January 2016 and the 2015 Choice Scholarship Program Annual Report: Participation and Payment Data were examined to determine who is using Indiana?s Choice Scholarship Program and how registered Indiana voters perceive the program The findings of this research suggest that most parents prefer to have some level of control over their children?s? education. This research also found that Indiana voters overwhelming support the program. However, it was also found that, although there is a favorable perception of Indiana?s voucher programs by low and middle-income families there is also a lack of participation by those same families.
Mook, Donald James Jr. "The Impact of School Choice on Funding Ohio’s Public Schools". Youngstown State University / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ysu1544016092672826.
Testo completoGoggins, Kylie. "PUBLIC SCHOOL CHOICE AND THE PUBLIC-PRIVATE SCHOOL DECISION". UKnowledge, 2010. http://uknowledge.uky.edu/gradschool_diss/71.
Testo completoWalters, Christopher R. "School choice, school quality, and human capital : three essays". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/81048.
Testo completoCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 173-180).
This dissertation consists of three essays covering topics in the economics of education. Two common threads connect these essays: first, a focus on the inputs and practices driving variation in effectiveness across educational programs; and second, an interest in the relationships between students' preferences, characteristics, and returns to human capital investment. In the first chapter, I develop and estimate a structural model of school choice that links students' decisions to apply to and attend charter schools in Boston, Massachusetts to their potential achievement test scores in charter schools and public schools. This chapter is motivated by a growing literature that uses randomized entrance lotteries to show that urban charter schools, including those in Boston, substantially increase test scores and close racial achievement gaps among their applicants. A key policy question is whether charter expansion is likely to produce similar effects on a larger scale. To address this question, I use the structural model to predict the effects of charter expansion for the citywide achievement distribution in Boston. Estimates of the model suggest that charter applicants are negatively selected on achievement gains: low-income students and students with low prior achievement gain the most from charter attendance, but are unlikely to apply to charter schools. This form of selection implies that lottery-based estimates understate gains for broader groups of students, and that charter schools will produce substantial gains for marginal applicants drawn in by expansion. Simulations suggest that realistic expansions are likely to reduce the gap in math scores between Boston and the rest of Massachusetts by up to 8 percent, and reduce racial achievement gaps by roughly 5 percent. Nevertheless, the estimates also imply that perceived application costs are high and that most students prefer traditional public schools to charter schools, so large expansions may leave many charter seats empty. These results suggest that in the absence of significant behavioral or institutional changes, the potential gains from charter expansion may be limited as much by demand as by supply. The second chapter, written jointly with Joshua Angrist and Parag Pathak, seeks to explain differences in effectiveness across charter schools. Using a large sample of lotteried applicants to charter schools throughout Massachusetts, we show that urban charter schools boost student achievement, while charter schools in other settings do not. We then explore student-level and school-level explanations for this difference. In an econometric framework that isolates sources of charter effect heterogeneity, we show that urban charter schools boost achievement well beyond that of urban public school students, while non-urban charters reduce achievement from a higher baseline. Student demographics explain some of these gains since urban charters are most effective for non-whites and low-baseline achievers. At the same time, non-urban charter schools are uniformly ineffective. Our estimates also reveal important school-level heterogeneity within the urban charter sample. A non-lottery analysis suggests that urban charters with binding, well-documented admissions lotteries generate larger score gains than under-subscribed urban charter schools with poor lottery records. Using a detailed survey of school practices and characteristics, we link charter impacts to inputs such as instructional time, classroom techniques and school philosophy. The relative effectiveness of urban lottery-sample charters is accounted for by these schools' embrace of the No Excuses approach to urban education, a package of policies that includes strict discipline, increased instructional time, selective teacher-hiring, and a focus on traditional skills. In the third chapter, I use data from the Head Start Impact Study (HSIS), a nationwide randomized trial of the Head Start program, to study the relationship between site-level treatment effects and educational inputs within Head Start. Studies of small-scale, intensive early-childhood programs, including the High/Scope Perry Preschool Project, show that such programs can have transformative effects on human capital and economic outcomes. Evidence for larger-scale programs like Head Start is more mixed. I use the HSIS data to ask whether Head Start centers using practices more similar to successful model programs produce larger short-run effects on cognitive and non-cognitive skills. My results show that while there is significant variation in effectiveness across Head Start centers, centers that are more similar to the Perry Preschool Project on observed dimensions are not more effective. Specifically, Head Start centers using the High/Scope curriculum, the centerpiece of the Perry experiment, do not produce larger gains relative to other centers. Other inputs often cited as essential to the success of the Perry Project, including teacher education, teacher certification, teacher/student ratios, instructional time, and frequency of home visiting, are also unrelated to effectiveness in Head Start. These results suggest that replicating the success of small-scale programs may be difficult, as the effectiveness of such programs may be due to idiosyncratic, unmeasured inputs. JEL Classification: 121, C51, J24
by Christopher Ross Walters.
Ph.D.
Shi, Peng Ph D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "Prediction and optimization in school choice". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/105002.
Testo completoThis electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.
Cataloged from student-submitted PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 243-250).
In this thesis, I study how data-driven optimization can be used to improve school choice. In a typical school choice system, each student receives a set of school options, called the student's menu. Based on his/her menu, each student submits a preference ranking of schools in the menu. Based on the submitted preferences, a centralized algorithm determines the assignment. In Boston, New York City, Chicago, Denver, New Orleans,Washington DC, among other cities, the assignment algorithm is the student-proposing deferred acceptance (DA) algorithm, which can also incorporate a priority for each student at each school. These priorities may contain a deterministic as well as a random component. An advantage of this algorithm is incentive-compatibility, meaning that no student has incentives to misreport his/her preferences. The first research question of this thesis is how to optimize the menus and priorities so that students have equitable chances to go to the schools they want, while the city's school busing costs are controlled. The second question is how the assignment algorithm can be modified to keep the same assignment probability of every student to every school, while improving neighbors' chances of going to the same school. To answer these questions, I build a multinomial logit (MNL) model to predict how students will rank schools under new menus, and validate the predictive accuracy of this model out of sample. I also propose a simple plan for menus and priorities, called the Home-Based plan, and compare with other proposals using the MNL model. (As a result of this analysis, the Home-Based plan was adopted by Boston in 2013.) I then show how one can further optimize the menus and priorities under the MNL model, by developing a new theoretical connection between stable matching and assortment planning, as well as methodologies on solving a new type of assortment planning problem, in which the objective is social welfare rather than revenue. Finally, I show how to further optimize the correlations between students' assignments to improve neighbors' chances of going to the same school.
by Peng Shi.
Ph. D.
Wilson, Joan. "Mobility and school choice in England". Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2009. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/10019921/.
Testo completoGraham, Justin W. "School choice : a discrete optimization approach". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2020. https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/127294.
Testo completoCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 32-34).
An equitable and flexible mechanism for assigning students to schools is a major concern for many school districts. The school a student attends dramatically impacts the quality of education, access to resources, family and neighborhood cohesion, and transportation costs. Facing this intricate optimization problem, school districts often utilize to stable-matching techniques which only produce stable matchings that do not incorporate these different objectives; this can be expensive and inequitable. We present a new optimization model for the Stable Matching (SM) school choice problem which relies on an algorithm we call Price-Costs-Flexibility-and- Fairness (PCF2). Our model leverages techniques to balance competing objectives using mixed-integer optimization methods. We explore the trade-offs between stability, costs, and preferences and show that, surprisingly, there are stable solutions that decrease transportation costs by 8-17% over the Gale-Shapley solution.
by Justin W. Graham.
S.M.
S.M. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, Operations Research Center
Ball, Annahita. "Parent/Guardian Empowerment & School Choice". The Ohio State University, 2012. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1343488332.
Testo completoLittle-Hunt, Catherine Cecchini. "Silent Policy Feedback Through School Choice". ScholarWorks, 2017. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/3949.
Testo completoTan, Christine Joy. "College Choice in the Philippines". Thesis, University of North Texas, 2009. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc9916/.
Testo completoChilders, Roberts Amy. "Gentrification and school choice: Where goes the neighborhood?" Digital Archive @ GSU, 2012. http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/eps_diss/88.
Testo completoZimmerman, Jill. "School Choice, Opportunity and Access: A Geographic Analysis of Public School Enrollment in New Orleans". ScholarWorks@UNO, 2013. http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1681.
Testo completoOakley, Hugh T. "Parental choice of elementary schooling alternatives in an affluent suburban community /". The Ohio State University, 1985. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1487263399026271.
Testo completoSeo, Youngme. "WHO CARES ABOUT SCHOOL QUALITY? THE ROLE OF SCHOOL QUALITY IN HOUSEHOLD PREFERENCE, SCHOOL DISTRICT CHOICE, AND WILLINGNESS TO PAY". Cleveland, Ohio : Cleveland State University, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=csu1246567102.
Testo completoAbstract. Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on July 29, 2009). Includes bibliographical references (p. 175-183). Available online via the OhioLINK ETD Center and also available in print.
Tsang, Chi-ming. "An investigation of the relationship between the socio-economic status and the parental choice of secondary schools in Hong Kong /". Hong Kong : University of Hong Kong, 1998. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record.jsp?B20379638.
Testo completoSibert, Courtney. "School Choice and Voucher Systems: A Comparison of the Drivers of Educational Achievement and of Private School Choice". Scholarship @ Claremont, 2012. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/106.
Testo completoSills, Janice Brown. "Relationship between parents' perception of school choice and their knowledge of vouchers, charter schools, Clayton county school choice provisions, and no child left behind". DigitalCommons@Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, 2008. http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/dissertations/38.
Testo completoRittman, Joan Bernice. "Parent choice of public school alternative programs". Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2001. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp04/NQ60267.pdf.
Testo completoBrown, Celia Alison. "Student medical school choice in the UK". Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2004. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.403890.
Testo completoDelery, Alan. "School Choice: The Black Middle-class Dilemma". ScholarWorks@UNO, 2010. http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1128.
Testo completoHostetler, Traci J. "School Choice: Academic, Financial, and Societal Implications". Youngstown State University / OhioLINK, 2021. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ysu1613056526287479.
Testo completoBorchert, Michael. "Career choice factors of high school students". Online version, 2002. http://www.uwstout.edu/lib/thesis/2002/2002borchertm.pdf.
Testo completoLloyd, Christine Berry. "THE FIRST GRADE PRIVATE SCHOOL SECTOR: TAXONOMY, CHOICE, AND ACHIEVEMENT". Lexington, Ky. : [University of Kentucky Libraries], 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10225/706.
Testo completoTitle from document title page (viewed on March 31, 2008). Document formatted into pages; contains: x, 196 p. : ill. (some col.). Includes abstract and vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 184-195).
Davids, Nuraan. "Learner and school : the interplay of school choice : a comparative case study of two Western Cape schools : what is the interplay between learner choice and school selection of learners?" Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9754.
Testo completoThe purpose of this study is to examine the interplay between learner choice and the school selection of learners. This interplay has two points of departure. The one is whether the logic of school choice is different depending on the choice-maker (parent or learner). The other is the process of school selection processes at each school, and how this impacts on, or constrains the choice of the choice-maker. The study is based on two comparative micro- case studies at two high schools - one a former HOR, and the other a former HOA school - in the Western Cape. Data was collected at the two schools by means of interviews with selected staff and questionnaires were issued to 410 grade eight learners at each school. The conceptual framework, incorporating the literature review, has positioned this study on two levels. Firstly, through setting the scene for the international school choice debate, with a specific focus on what parents and learners want from the school of their choice. And secondly, in establishing the trends amongst schools in terms of selection processes. Linked to both these positions is whether school choice policies lead to the empowerment of the choice-maker.
Tsang, Chi-ming University of Hong Kong. "An investigation of the relationship between the socio-economic status and the parental choice of secondary schools in Hong Kong". Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 1998. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B31960480.
Testo completoDuszka, Christopher Damian. "School Climate in the School Choice Era: A Comparative Analysis of District-Run Public Schools and Charter Schools". FIU Digital Commons, 2018. https://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/3922.
Testo completoAghazadian, Megan Alicia. "Willing to go the distance relationships between school characteristics and school choice in DC public schools /". Connect to Electronic Thesis (CONTENTdm), 2009. http://worldcat.org/oclc/455328804/viewonline.
Testo completoTan, Christine Joy Newsom Ron. "College choice in the Philippines". [Denton, Tex.] : University of North Texas, 2009. http://digital.library.unt.edu/permalink/meta-dc-9916.
Testo completoNicholson, Andrew. "What factors influence school choice, with particular reference to school reputation?" Thesis, Anglia Ruskin University, 2016. http://arro.anglia.ac.uk/701686/.
Testo completoNicholson, Andrew. "What factors influence school choice, with particular reference to school reputation?" Thesis, Anglia Ruskin University, 2016. https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/701686/1/Nicholson_2016.pdf.
Testo completoMontaño, Elizabeth. "Becoming Unionized in a Charter School: How Charter School Teachers Navigate the Culture of Choice". Digital Commons at Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School, 2012. https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/etd/237.
Testo completoShanks, Julius Nyerere Witte James E. "Public school choice a study of the perceptions of Alabama public school principals /". Auburn, Ala., 2006. http://repo.lib.auburn.edu/2006%20Fall/Dissertations/SHANKS_JULIUS_25.pdf.
Testo completoCurtin, Thomas B. (Thomas Brian) 1945. "Managing choice in research and development". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/29709.
Testo completoIncludes bibliographical references (leaves 41-49).
Effective innovation is the product of an iterative series of key decisions by lead researchers, lead users, and lead sponsors/investors. Lead sponsors are critical. Sponsors at the efficient frontier creatively link technical communities and potential markets. The value of research and development (R&D) lies primarily in creating choices; R&D managers add value by managing choice effectively. An approach has been developed to align portfolio balance with strategic balance in managing R&D. A system dynamics model is used for strategy and a real option model for portfolios, calibrated with data from the Office of Naval Research. An implied risk strategy has been determined describing how managers have historically made R&D choices. With this profile, historical R&D budget allocations from 1962 to the present have produced of order one commercial product annually. A strategy for maximizing product development rate is described. From the perspective of a manager choosing specific projects to fund, the three phase R&D model can be viewed as a compound call option. An R&D Factor quantifies R&D contributions to the total value of effective innovation. Technical Readiness Levels (Technical Risk), Market Readiness Levels (Market Risk) and Network Connection Levels (Diversity Risk) comprise a three component risk vector whose magnitude is the project Volatility Index. Option value, calculated for a set of ONR-relevant product classes, is found to change investment decisions. Sensitivity studies reveal a critical transition interval in volatility, where managerial effort should be focused. Two organizational questions underlie this work. How can corporate managers propagate strategy without micromanagement? How can portfolio managers align project investment choices with corporate strategy without losing flexibility? To strike a balance, mechanisms for alignment of choices have been constructed. Corporate strategy is linked to portfolio management in aggregate balance through budget ratios related to target output, and in specific project prioritization through market risk parameterizations. Implications about organizational structure are discussed.
by Thomas B. Curtin.
M.B.A.
Rodriguez, Jorge F. (Jorge Federico) 1976. "Essays in consumption and portfolio choice". Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/29646.
Testo completoIncludes bibliographical references (p. 123-126).
This thesis analyzes optimal consumption and portfolio strategy by considering three different extensions to the classic work by Merton (1971). The first chapter considers consumption and strategic asset allocation when expected returns are predictable for Epstein-Zin preferences. The second chapter focuses on the role of imperfect information in the consumption and portfolio choice problem and presents a tractable solution to the strategic asset allocation problem in incomplete markets. The third chapter considers the role of human capital in consumption and portfolio choice and presents normative evidence of hump-shaped life-cycle investment in risky assets, in line with empirical findings on asset allocation strategies. In Chapter 1 (co-authored with John Campbell, George Chacko, and Luis Viceira) we derive an approximate solution to a continuous-time intertemporal portfolio and consumption choice problem. The problem is the continuous-time equivalent of the discrete-time problem studied by Campbell and Viceira (1999), in which the expected excess return on a risky asset follows an AR(1) process, while the riskless interest rate is constant. We show also how to obtain continuous-time parameters that are consistent with discrete-time econometric estimates. The continuous-time solution is numerically close to that of Campbell and Viceira and has the property that conservative long-term investors have a large positive intertemporal hedging demand for stocks. In Chapter 2, we relax the assumption on preferences made in Chapter 1 and consider how imperfect information about expected excess returns on the risky asset shifts the asset allocation strategy. I present a model of consumption and portfolio choice with imperfect information.
(cont.) I solve analytically the consumption and portfolio choice problem for an investor learning about the current value of time-varying expected returns. When prices are the only observables, the investor optimally estimates the current expected returns using the realized returns. Because of this, the market is observationally complete for an imperfectly informed investor. The observational completeness of the market allows me to find analytical, closed-form solutions to the investor's consumption and portfolio choice problem. I show how learning affects both the covariance and the consumption smoothing component of the hedging portfolio. Applying the model to monthly return data, I show a significant reduction in hedging demands due to imperfect information. In contrast to portfolio choice assuming expected returns are observed, in some cases the reduction implies the agent will optimally hold a negative hedging portfolio. I solve in closed-form for the model implied R2 for the return forecast regression, in other words the predictable fraction of return variance, and discuss the relationship between the reduction in hedging demands and the reduction in the model implied R2 for the return forecast regression. Little work has been done in regards to the role of labor income when investment opportunities are stochastic. Chapter 3 considers the consumption and portfolio choice problem of an investor when interest rates are time-varying and labor income growth might be sensitive to changes in interest rates. We obtain closed-form solutions to the consumption and portfolio choice for an investor with both inelastic and elastic labor supply ...
by Jorge F. Rodriguez.
Ph.D.
Talley, Adrian B. "School Choice| A Study of the Factors That Motivated Parents to Select the No Child Left Behind School Choice Provision". Thesis, The George Washington University, 2014. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3631307.
Testo completoWhen signed into law in 2001, the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation ushered in broad policy affecting the federal government's engagement with local governments on education oversight and monitoring. One provision of NCLB offered parents added control over their child's education and gave them the right to leave their Title I school—when the school received the label "in need of improvement"—for another school within the district.
This study focused specifically on NCLB school choice and examined parents' decisions to opt for or against school choice. More specifically, this inquiry explored the factors that motivated parents to opt for school choice and the benefits that parents hoped to gain for themselves and their children by either staying in their home school or opting for a school of choice.
Three research questions guided this study and helped the researcher to examine parental perceptions through a social capital lens: 1. What were the characteristics of the parents who opted for NCLB school choice compared with the parents who opted to remain in their home school? 2. From the parents' perspective, what factors led to parents' decisions about selecting their home school or selecting school choice? 3. What characteristics of the school that parents choose to attend made the school a better choice for their child?
The researcher utilized a mixed methods methodology to facilitate the collection of data that included the distinct voices of the parents who accessed NCLB school choice. The use of both surveys and interviews helped the researcher to gain a better understanding of the parents' thought processes as they made their choices.
Major findings from the research indicated that parents who chose to use their school choice option focused on the students' learning environment when making their decision. Parents who decided to stay in their home school focused more on their children's well-being and their own connections to the school staff. Additionally, findings indicated that parents who opted for school choice tended to have higher incomes and were better educated. Hispanic parents were more inclined to stay in their home school, while White parents were more likely to move out of their home school.
This study provides information that policy makers should consider as they examine the option of choice for educational settings and seek to ensure that choice does not detrimentally affect students in a wide variety of school environments.
Rice, Lorien Alane. "Transportation as a determinant of education and employment outcomes /". Diss., Connect to a 24 p. preview or request complete full text in PDF format. Access restricted to UC campuses, 2004. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/ucsd/fullcit?p3158464.
Testo completoBald, Josh. "What motivates families to choose a charter school?" Thesis, University of Oregon, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20506.
Testo completoDin, Ramida M. "The emigration to international schools". Thesis, Hong Kong : University of Hong Kong, 2002. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record.jsp?B25752492.
Testo completoHolden, Kristian. "Essays on School Choice, Information, and Textbook Funding". Thesis, University of Oregon, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/18391.
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