Sentences with phrase «growing academic literature»

There is a growing academic literature on market microstructure; one thing it addresses is measurement of the total costs of trading.

Not exact matches

The Harvard study joins a growing collection of investigations in the academic literature that attempt to determine whether a physician's gender plays a role in health outcomes.
A growing volume of academic literature and media attention has focused on research about birth place.
Bradley is one of a growing number of academics in the United Kingdom who are doing their digging in the masses of unpublished «grey literature» generated when commercial archaeologists are brought in to excavate before any sort of construction.
The report is part of a growing body of academic and advocacy literature aimed at focusing attention on gender.
What started last year with one AP Human Geography course offered to 90 students in seven schools across the district, grew into an expansive roll - out for the 2015 - 2016 academic year, which includes offering five AP courses — Human Geography, Psychology, English Literature, Statistics and Environmental Science — with capacity to serve up to 520 students.
A growing literature in the economics of education emphasizes the importance of peer effects in determining students» academic outcomes.
According to Harvey, Liu, and Zhu's (2015) survey of the literature, top - tier academic journals document over 300 distinct factors and the number grows every year.
As this paper explains, producer and consumer responsibility has become a growing topic for discussion, particularly in academic literatures.
To buttress this argument, there is a growing body of academic literature that makes the point that the atmosphere belongs to everyone on earth, the available carbon space must be apportioned equally, and going by that, India has a lot of its quota left.
Relative to children with no ACEs, children who experienced ACEs had increased odds of having below - average academic skills including poor literacy skills, as well as attention problems, social problems, and aggression, placing them at significant risk for poor school achievement, which is associated with poor health.23 Our study adds to the growing literature on adverse outcomes associated with ACEs3 — 9,24 — 28 by pointing to ACEs during early childhood as a risk factor for child academic and behavioral problems that have implications for education and health trajectories, as well as achievement gaps and health disparities.
Peer Influence as a Behavior Management Tool Most public and private childcare systems continue to overlook peer influence despite the growing body of literature indicating that it represents a powerful force in maintaining orderly, productive, and positive academic and rehabilitative environments (e.g., Bellafiore & Salend, 1983; Brendtro & Lindgren, 1988; Emery, 1990; Gadow & McKibbon, 1984; Gibbs, Potter, Goldstein, & Brendtro, 1996; Salend, Jantzen, & Geik, 1992; Wasmund, 1988).
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