Summary: | The
Education Longitudinal Study (ELS) of 2002 represents a major
longitudinal effort designed to provide trend data about critical
transitions experienced by students as they proceed through high
school and into postsecondary education or their careers. The 2002
sophomore cohort will be followed, initially at 2-year intervals, to
collect policy-relevant data about educational processes and outcomes,
especially as such data pertain to student learning, predictors of
dropping out, and high school effects on students' access to, and
success in, postsecondary education and the work force. The Education
Longitudinal Study (ELS) of 2002 is part of the National Center for
Education Statistics (NCES)' National Education Longitudinal Studies
program which also includes three completed studies: the National
Longitudinal Study of the High School Class of 1972 (NLS-72), the High
School and Beyond (HS & B) longitudinal study of 1980, and the National
Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NELS88). |
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