Joshua Cowen

Associate Professor of Teacher Education Michigan State University

  • East Lansing MI

Joshua Cowen's current research focuses on teacher quality, student and teacher mobility, program evaluation and education policy.

Contact

Michigan State University

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Media

Biography

Joshua Cowen's current research focuses on teacher quality, student and teacher mobility, program evaluation and education policy. His work has been published in multiple scholarly journals and funded by a diverse array of philanthropies. He is currently co-Editor of Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis and a member of the Editorial Board at Education Finance and Policy.

Industry Expertise

Education/Learning
Research

Areas of Expertise

Educational Policy
K-12 Administration
Statistics, Psychometrics, and Research Design
Teacher Education, Learning, and Policy

Education

University of Michigan

B.A.

History

University of Wisconsin-Madison

M.A.

Political Science

University of Wisconsin-Madison

Ph.D.

Political Science

Affiliations

  • Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis
  • Education Finance and Policy

News

Class sizes raise concerns for Mich. parents, districts, teachers

Detroit News  online

2018-09-26

Joshua M. Cowen, an associate professor of education policy at Michigan State University, gathered data on class sizes at 518 Michigan school districts from the last one to five years as part of a larger study on collective bargaining agreements.

Cowen said negotiated class sizes in those districts range from 18 to 35 students in grade 4 with maximums from 22 to 35 students.

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Public oversight improves test scores in voucher schools

MSU Today  

2014-06-10

In a pioneering study, Joshua Cowen and colleagues found that voucher schools in Milwaukee saw a large jump in math and reading scores the year after a new law required them to release the results. During the four years before the law was enacted, math and reading scores declined or remained stagnant...

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In Senate hearing, DeVos shows ignorance of central debate over how to measure schools

Michigan Radio  

2017-01-18

Joshua Cowen, associate professor at the Department of Education Administration at Michigan State University, joined Stateside to help us understand the exchange.

First, he defined the terms.

Proficiency, he said, “is a target that sets a minimum level of achievement, where all students are expected to meet a certain threshold, essentially, that defines them as, by definition, at proficiency in that particular subject.”

Growth, on the other hand, “is basically customized for individual students based on what they scored before. So, what we’re doing is measuring distance from point A in the student’s academic career to point B.”

Cowen said the growth vs. proficiency debate can “become particularly heated” within the education community...

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Journal Articles

School choice as a latent variable: Estimating the “complier average causal effect” of vouchers in Charlotte

Policy Studies Journal

2008

Randomized field trials of school voucher policy interventions face major statistical hurdles in the measurement of a voucher effect on student achievement. Selection bias undermines the benefits of randomization when the treatment, a random offer of a voucher, is declined by participants who systematically differ from those who accept. This article argues that the complier average causal effect (CACE) is the parameter of interest in voucher evaluations. As an example, the CACE is estimated using data from a small, one-year field trial of ...

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MPCP longitudinal educational growth study baseline report

Education Working Paper Archive

2008

Since the late 1800s, Maine and Vermont have provided school vouchers to students in certain rural areas that lacked a public school, originally allowing them to attend any public or private school of their choosing in the area at public expense. The Maine program was subsequently limited to public or non-sectarian private schools. There is no clear consensus in the school choice literature regarding whether or not Maine and Vermont's “town tuitioning” programs are actual voucher programs, though in concept and operation they ...

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Going public: Who leaves a large, longstanding, and widely available urban voucher program?

American Educational Research Journal

2012

This article contributes to research concerning the determinants of student mobility between public and private schools. The authors analyze a unique set of data collected as part of a new evaluation of Milwaukee's citywide voucher program. The authors find several important patterns. Students who switch from the private to the public sector were performing lower than their peers on standardized tests in the prior year.

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