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Report
December 2001

Five-Year Adult and Child Impacts for Eleven Programs

How best to help people move from welfare to work — particularly whether an employment-focused approach or an education-focused approach is more effective — has been a subject of long-standing debate. This report summary, which describes the long-term effects of 11 different mandatory welfare-to-work programs for single parents and their children, takes a major step toward resolving this debate.

Report
December 2001

The Implementation of 24-Month Time-Limit Extensions in W-2

Report
November 2001

The Experiences of Current and Former Welfare Mothers Who Work

Report
November 2001

Impressions of Community College Access and Retention from Low-Wage Workers

Brief
November 2001

Learning from the Jobs-Plus Demonstration

Report
November 2001

Final Lessons from Parents’ Fair Share

Fathers provide important financial and emotional support to their children. Yet low-income noncustodial fathers, with low wages and high rates of joblessness, often do not fulfill their parenting roles. The child support system has not traditionally helped these men to do so, since its focus has been on securing financial support from fathers who can afford to pay.

Report
November 2001

Interim Findings from the Self-Sufficiency Project’s Applicant Study

Report
November 2001

How W-2 Settles Disputes

Report
November 2001

A Look at Early Implementation and Impacts on Student Achievement in Eight Elementary Schools

Report
November 2001

Initial Assessments in the Milwaukee County W-2 Program

Methodological Publication
October 2001

Methodological Lessons from an Evaluation of Accelerated Schools

Methodological Publication
October 2001

New Directions in Evaluations of American Welfare-to-Work and Employment Initiatives

Working Paper
September 2001

The Effects of Welfare and Employment Programs on Child Care

Report
September 2001

Studying Efforts to Increase Adult Learner Persistence in Library Literacy Programs

Brief
July 2001

Can Reform Resolve Welfare Policy's Thorniest Conundrum?