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EdWorkingPapers Policy and Practice Series

The EdWorkingPapers Policy & Practice Series is designed to bridge the gap between academic research and real-world decision-making. Each installment summarizes a newly released EdWorkingPaper and highlights the most actionable insights for policymakers and education leaders.

  • Education and Climate Change: Synthesizing the Evidence to Guide Future Research

    As climate-related disasters close schools, damage infrastructure, and disrupt learning, it’s clear that education systems are on the front lines of a warming planet. But schools aren’t just victims. As the nation’s second-largest public infrastructure system and a central part of students’ lives, they are uniquely positioned to lead climate solutions by investing in more resilient facilities, reducing their environmental footprint, and preparing the next generation to meet the challenge head-on.


  • The Net Benefits of Raising Bachelor’s Degree Completion through the City University of New York ACE Program

    A previous randomized controlled trial (RCT) evaluated the impact of CUNY’s Accelerate, Complete, and Engage (ACE) program on bachelor’s degree completion and found students offered ACE were 12 percentage points more likely to earn a bachelor’s degree within 5 years compared to similar students not offered the program (Scuello and Strumbos, 2024). But how do these short-term outcomes translate into longer-term benefits to taxpayers and society?


  • Closing the Gaps: An Examination of Early Impacts of Dallas ISD’s Opt-out Policy on Advanced Course Enrollment

    In Dallas ISD, a simple policy shift of automatically enrolling qualifying students in Algebra 1 resulted in a 13 percentage point increase in enrollment before high school, with particularly strong gains for Hispanic students. In 2019, the district moved from an “opt-in” to an “opt-out” system, automatically enrolling qualified 5th-grade students in advanced 6th-grade courses, shifting from an opt-in system that often relied on family or teacher advocacy. The results show that when schools remove hidden hurdles, more students, particularly those often left out, get on a path to rigorous coursework and greater opportunities.


  • Teaching Computational Thinking to Children in Head Start Classrooms: Results from a Randomized Controlled Trial

    If we want a broader, more diverse pipeline into high-demand tech fields, the work starts in preschool. As the demand for digital skills continues to grow, early disparities in access to computing education are turning into long-term opportunity gaps. Students from low-income and historically marginalized communities are often the last to gain exposure to computer science, and by the time they do, the opportunity gap is already wide.


  • The Impact of High-Impact Tutoring on Student Attendance: Evidence from a State Initiative

    This study provides compelling evidence that tutoring can do more than boost test scores; it can actually get students back in the classroom. On average, students were 1.2 percentage points less likely to be absent on days when they were scheduled to receive tutoring, suggesting that they are motivated to participate in tutoring. This impact was even greater for middle schoolers and students who’d missed more than 30% of school days the prior year. The study also found that the design matters: tutoring only improved attendance when it combined at least two evidence-based features like small groups, frequent sessions, and in-school delivery.


  • The Effects of High School Remediation on Long-Run Educational Attainment

    Every year, millions of high school students take remedial courses. In Florida alone, nearly a quarter of high schoolers took a remedial English course during the 2022-23 school year. Remedial courses offer additional instructional time, often with smaller class sizes and differentiated support from qualified teachers, to help struggling students improve in the subject area. Yet despite how common these courses are, we still know very little about how they actually affect students’ chances of success in college.


  • The Four Day Gamble: The Quasi-Experimental Effects of Four-Day School Week Adoption on Teacher, Principal, and Paraprofessional Staff Turnover and District Financial Outcomes

    With education budgets under strain nationwide, a growing number of districts, especially rural districts, have adopted four-day school weeks (4DSW) in an effort to reduce costs. Between 1999 and 2019, 4DSW adoption grew by over 500%, with further acceleration in the years following the pandemic, and nearly 90% of districts with 4DSW are rural. The primary motivators for adopting a 4DSW are to (1) generate cost savings, as one fewer day of classes each week means districts can use fewer resources, leading to lower spending (2) help rural and budget-constrained districts reduce educator turnover by offering improved work-life balance