班级规模政策研究的相对影响

J. Kim
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引用次数: 11

摘要

社会科学研究表明,减少班级规模对少数族裔和贫民区儿童第一年正式学校教育的成绩影响最大。”尽管学术界对班级规模具体研究的影响存在分歧,但经济学家普遍认为,有针对性的班级规模政策比无针对性的政策基于更有力的证据。例如,经济学家埃里克·哈努舍克认为,“在特定的情况下,班级规模的缩减肯定是有益的——对特定的学生群体、科目和教师来说。”^同样,经济学家艾伦·克鲁格(Alan Krueger)指出,“在STAR实验和许多文献中发现的效应大小对少数族裔和弱势学生的影响大于对其他学生的影响,(而且)从经济学角度考虑,如果资源被用于那些从小班授课中受益最多的学生,那么资源将得到最佳分配。”然而,许多州的立法机构已经制定了没有目标的和昂贵的政策来减少所有学校的班级规模,在所有的学生小组中,并且超出了小学低年级。因此,在班级规模辩论中,研究和政策之间的核心紧张关系是这样的:研究似乎最强烈地支持有针对性的班级规模政策,但有针对性的政策是政策领域的例外,而不是常态。因此,一些社会科学家批评说,全面削减班级规模的做法代价高昂,而且在科学上站不住脚
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Relative Influence of Research on Class Size Policy
Social science research suggests that reducing class size has its largest effects on the achievement of minority and inner-city children during the first year of formal schooling.' Despite scholarly disagreements about the implications of specific studies on class size, economists generally agree that targeted class-size policies rest on stronger evidence than untargeted policies. For example, economist Eric Hanushek contends that "surely class-size reductions are beneficial in specific circumstances—for specific groups of students, subject matters, and teachers."^ Similarly, economist Alan Krueger notes that the "effect sizes found in the STAR experiment and much of the literature are greater for minority and disadvantaged students than for other students [and] economic considerations suggest that resources would be optimally allocated if they were targeted toward those who benefit the most from smaller classes."^ However, a number of state legislatures have enacted untargeted and expensive policies to reduce class sizes in all schools, among all subgroups of students, and beyond the early elementary grades. Therefore, the central tension between research and policy in the class-size debate is this: research seems to support targeted class-size policies most strongly, but targeted policies are the exception rather than the norm in the policy arena. As a result, some social scientists have criticized across-the-board class-size reductions as prohibitively expensive and scientifically indefensible.'*
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