Publication: A Duration Analysis of CONALEP (Mexico's National Technical Professional School)
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2004-06
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Date
2013-06-25
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Abstract
Mexico's National Technical Professional School (Colegio Nacional de Educación Profesional Técnica, CONALEP) is the largest technical education system in the country. CONALEP serves low-income students at the upper-secondary school level in Mexico. Using graduate tracer surveys from CONALEP, the author analyzes the impact of modular courses and reform programs implemented by CONALEP in 1991-92 on CONALEP graduates' labor market outcomes. Results indicate that graduates from the pre-reform program had to search longer for a job compared with those of the post-reform program. Graduates from the post-reform program have 45 percent higher probability of finding a job than those from the pre-reform program. However, the pre-reform program cohorts earned higher hourly wages than those from the post-reform program.
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“López-Acevedo, Gladys. 2004. A Duration Analysis of CONALEP (Mexico's National Technical Professional School). Policy Research Working Paper;No.3327. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14177 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”
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