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Sustainable Urban Food Production with a Special Focus on Permaculture From Hungarian Perspectives - Uszkai Andrea cikke a Planlama folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

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A külföldi befektetések jó része valójában hazai pénz – Így torzítja a körbejáró FDI jelensége a statisztikát - Sass Magdolna és Fertő Imre cikke a KRTK blogban Tovább olvasom

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Exploring the drivers of farm sustained participation in agri-environmental programmes - Štefan Bojnec és Fertő Imre cikke megjelent az Agricultural and Food Economics folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

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Vasárus Gábor a Magyar Hangnak nyilatkozott a zártkerteket érintő legfrissebb szabályozási változások kapcsán Tovább olvasom

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Understanding Innovation in European Mountain Product Value Chains - Nemes Gusztáv és szerzőtársai cikke megjelent a Mountain Research and Development folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

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A magyar és az ukrán ruházati ipar jellemzői és kapcsolódása - Dobos Emese és szerzőtársai tanulmánya megjelent a Magyar Textiltechnika folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

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KTI szeminárium: Chris van Klaveren – The impact of intensive coaching for vocational students on long-term socio-economic outcomes. Evidence from a randomized experiment

 

Az előadásra hibrid formában kerül sor Zoom felületen, illetve személyesen a K11-12-es földszinti előadóban 2024.10.10-én, 13.00 órától.

Előadó: Chris van Klaveren

BIO: Chris van Klaveren holds a Ph.D. in Mathematical Economics from the University of Amsterdam. He is a Professor of Empirical Methodological Innovation at the Department of Clinical Psychology of the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. He is director of the Amsterdam Center for Learning (ACLA), Education Lab Netherlands, and previously was a researcher at the World Bank in Washington DC. His current research focuses on the development of innovative methods by combining insights from causal and predictive modeling in social science research.

Cím: Artificial Intelligence and Jobs: Evidence from US Commuting Zones (with Alessandra Bonfiglioli, Gino Gancia and Ioannis Papadakis)

Abstract: School dropout is an important social and economic problem. A large literature documents the benefits of education, such as higher wages, better health and less crime. However, in many countries, the proportion of students that leave education prematurely remains significant. In this paper, we study the long-term effects of an intensive coaching intervention in vocational education. Students received one- or two years support and guidance regarding their study activities, personal problems and internships in firms. On average, one fulltime coach was assigned to a class of twenty students. A total of 450 students participated in the experiment and were randomly assigned to the coaching program. Van der Steeg, van Elk and Webbink (2015) have reported the short-term effects of this intervention. They found that one year of coaching reduced dropout rates by more than 40%, from 17 to 10 percentage points. In this paper, we investigate the long-term outcomes of this intervention. We combine our experimental data with administrative data to evaluate the programs impact up to twelve years after the intervention on a range of outcomes, such as education, labour market participation, criminal activity, and family formation.