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ECONOMIES OF SCALE, BY PROGRAM, IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS

ELCHANAN COHN (Associate Professor of Economics at The Pennsylvania State University, is author of The Economics of Education, Public Expenditure Analysis, Economics of State Aid to Education (1974) and a number of related journal articles)
TEH‐WEI HU (Pennsylvania State University as Professor of Economics, has published widely in journals and is the author of Econometrics: An Introductory Analysis, published by University Park Press)

Journal of Educational Administration

ISSN: 0957-8234

Article publication date: 1 February 1973

95

Abstract

Scholars in the areas of economics and educational administration have in recent years examined the relationship between educational cost and school size. One distinguishing characteristic of such studies has been the choice of a school or a school district as the unit of analysis. Another is the overwhelming choice of a parabolic function to describe the cost‐size relationship. This study examines the question whether the unit of analysis should be a specific program of study (such as mathematics or social studies), utilizing data collected from Michigan secondary schools for the school year 1971–1972. The data are also used to check whether a hyperbolic relationship between school size and costs provides a better statistical fit to the data. The Michigan data encompass both secondary academic and vocational programs.

Citation

COHN, E. and HU, T. (1973), "ECONOMIES OF SCALE, BY PROGRAM, IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS", Journal of Educational Administration, Vol. 11 No. 2, pp. 302-313. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb009707

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1973, MCB UP Limited

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