Subtle scientific insight in the field of economics. :)

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The discussion revolves around a paper titled "Using Nudges to Prevent Student Dropouts in the Pandemic," which highlights the significant impact of COVID-19 on student engagement and dropout rates, particularly among adolescents. The study, conducted in Brazil, demonstrates that text message nudges effectively motivated high school students to remain engaged during school shutdowns, reducing dropout rates and increasing motivation to return to school once classes resumed. The findings suggest that interventions based on adolescent psychology can positively influence students' educational trajectories, although the effects diminish once communication ceases. The author expresses skepticism about the classification of the paper under "General Economics," arguing that it aligns more closely with educational studies. Additionally, there is a critique of the term "novel," suggesting it has become overly broad and synonymous with "different," which may dilute its significance in academic discourse.
sbrothy
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I didn't really want to create another thread just to make a (hopefully) humorous observation but on the other hand to link to this paper under a "cranky science" header hardly seems fair. Especially when I really haven't read the thing in it's entirety.

One very scientific statement piqued my curiosity particularly though. Lo (subtle insight at end of abstract):

"Using Nudges to Prevent Student Dropouts in the Pandemic"
- - - - https://arxiv.org/abs/2009.04767

"The impacts of COVID-19 reach far beyond the hundreds of lives lost to the disease; in particular, the pre-existing learning crisis is expected to be magnified during school shutdown. Despite efforts to put distance learning strategies in place, the threat of student dropouts, especially among adolescents, looms as a major concern. Are interventions to motivate adolescents to stay in school effective amidst the pandemic? Here we show that, in Brazil, nudges via text messages to high-school students, to motivate them to stay engaged with school activities, substantially reduced dropouts during school shutdown, and greatly increased their motivation to go back to school when classes resume. While such nudges had been shown to decrease dropouts during normal times, it is surprising that those impacts replicate in the absence of regular classes because their effects are typically mediated by teachers (whose effort in the classroom changes in response to the nudges). Results show that insights from the science of adolescent psychology can be leveraged to shift developmental trajectories at a critical juncture. They also qualify those insights: effects increase with exposure and gradually fade out once communication stops, providing novel evidence that motivational interventions work by redirecting adolescents' attention."

There you have it. I know it's unfair to take it out of context in this way but it lightened my day a little. It might lighten yours as well...
 
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Yes. Actually, every time I read something classified as "novel" (using that particular word), I feel a bit of an allergy. Also, I don't really understand why this appears under "General Economics" (emphasis mine) on the arXiv.
 
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No. I also had to ensure I wrote the right thing. If anything some kind of education would be a better place for it.
 
A nice example of a more general phenomenon. Given a topic for study and a large landscape of choices to make along the way, any particular set of choices is unlikely to have been made before and therefore "novel". Novel seems to have become synonymous with "different."
 
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