Tuesday, 6 January 2009
Social hell
“Many people labour in life under the impression that they are doing something right, yet they may not show solid results for a long time. They need a capacity for continuously adjourned gratification to survive a steady diet of peer cruelty without becoming demoralized. They look like idiots to their cousins, they look like idiots to their peers, they need courage to continue. No confirmation comes to them, no validation, no fawning students, no Nobel, no Schnobel. “How was your year?” brings them a small but containable spasm of pain deep inside, since almost all of their years will seem wasted to someone looking at their life from the outside. Then bang, the lumpy event comes that brings the grand vindication.
Or it may never come.
Believe me, it is tough to deal with the social consequences of the appearance of continuous failure. We are social animals; hell is other people.”
Sunday, 4 January 2009
rate of returns to education
The draft lottery (p.251 borjas)
An experiment for returns to education was performed using
[1] Angrist, j. and Krueger, a. “estimating the payoff to schooling using the vietnam-era draft lottery” national bureau of economic research working paper no. 4067, may 1992
Saturday, 3 January 2009
school quality
According to David Card and Alan Krueger:
"Thirty years after the Coleman report, it is unfortunate and frustrating that
more is not known about schooling. While most of the literature on test scores
points to little, if any, effect of school resources, some observational studies and
one actual experiment have found a connection. Decisions about educational resources
and reform have to be made in an environment of much uncertainty."
The full paper that this conclusion was from can be found here http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0895-3309%28199623%2910%3A4%3C31%3ASRASOA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-L