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Sean Kelly

Researcher at University of Pittsburgh

Publications -  69
Citations -  2335

Sean Kelly is an academic researcher from University of Pittsburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tracking (education) & Student engagement. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 66 publications receiving 2021 citations. Previous affiliations of Sean Kelly include University of Notre Dame & University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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An Event History Analysis of Teacher Attrition: Salary, Teacher Tracking, and Socially Disadvantaged Schools

TL;DR: In this article, a retrospective person-year database was constructed to examine teacher attrition over the course of the teaching career, showing that higher teacher salaries reduced attrition, but only slightly so.
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Student engagement as a function of environmental complexity in high school classrooms

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the linkage between the quality of the learning environment and student's experience in seven high school classrooms in six different subject areas and find that environmental complexity and its subdimensions predicted student engagement and sense of classroom self-esteem.
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The Black-White Gap in Mathematics Course Taking.

TL;DR: The authors found that the black-white gap in mathematics course taking is the greatest in integrated schools where black students are in the minority and cannot be entirely accounted for by individual-level differences in the course-taking qualifications or family backgrounds of white and black students.
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Race, social class, and student engagement in middle school English classrooms

TL;DR: Levels of engagement among black and low SES students are mostly insensitive to classroom context, suggesting there is little collective action directed at fostering anti-school norms among these student groups.
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Curriculum tracking and teacher expectations: evidence from discrepant course taking models

TL;DR: This paper examined how students' high school track placements affect teacher expectations regarding students' educational attainment in the NELS data and found that teachers in high track classes have higher college expectations than teachers in lower track classrooms.