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  5. The 1995 NRC Ratings of Doctoral Programs: A Hedonic Model

The 1995 NRC Ratings of Doctoral Programs: A Hedonic Model

File(s)
Ehrenberg76_The_1995_NRC_Ratings_of_Doctoral_Programs_A_Hedonic_Model.pdf (1.08 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/74938
Collections
Faculty Publications - Labor Economics
ILR Articles and Chapters
Author
Ehrenberg, Ronald G.
Hurst, Peter J.
Abstract

We describe how one can use multivariate regression models and data collected by the National Research Council as part of its recent ranking of doctoral programs (Research-Doctorate Programs in the United States: Continuity and Change) to analyze how measures of program size, faculty seniority, faculty research productivity, and faculty productivity in producing doctoral degrees influence subjective ratings of doctoral programs in 35 academic fields. Using data for one of the fields, economics, we illustrate how university administrators can use the models to compute the impact of changing the number of faculty positions they allocate to the field on the ranking of their programs. Finally, we illustrate how administrators can "decompose" the differences between a department's rating and the ratings of a group of higher ranked departments in the field into difference due to faculty size, faculty seniority, faculty research productivity, and faculty productivity in producing doctoral students. This decomposition suggests the types of questions that a department and a university should be addressing if they are serious about wanting to improve the department's ranking.

Date Issued
1996-04-01
Keywords
National Research Council
•
NRC
•
doctoral programs
•
rankings
Related DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0272-7757(97)00038-1
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: © University of Chicago Press. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved. Later version published as: Ehrenberg, R. G. & Hurst, P. J. (1998). The 1995 ratings of doctoral programs: A Hedonic model. Economics of Education Review, 17(2), 137-148.
Type
article

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