
Prashant Loyalka
· Assistant ProfessorVerifiedStanford University · Social and Cultural Analysis in Education
Active 1900–2025
About
Prashant Loyalka is an Associate Professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Education and a Senior Fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies at Stanford University. His research focuses on examining and addressing inequalities in the education of children and youth, as well as understanding and improving the quality of education received by children and youth in multiple countries including China, India, Russia, and the United States. He conducts large-scale evaluations of educational programs and policies aimed at enhancing student outcomes. Loyalka's work encompasses assessment, testing and measurement, diversity and identity, higher education, immigrants and immigration, international and comparative education, poverty and inequality, and teachers and teaching.
Research topics
- Economics
- Political Science
- Economic growth
- Medicine
- Computer Science
- Operations management
- Environmental health
- Management
- Geography
- Socioeconomics
- Business
- Sociology
- Nursing
- Medical education
- Finance
- Marketing
- Labour economics
- Demography
- Microeconomics
- Industrial organization
- Mathematics
- Engineering
- Psychology
Selected publications
UNC Libraries · 2025-04-18
articleOpen accessThis study documents the COVID-19 disease-control measures enacted in rural China and examines the economic and social impacts of these measures. We conducted two rounds of surveys with 726 randomly selected village informants across seven provinces. Strict disease-control measures have been universally enforced and appear to have been successful in limiting disease transmission in rural communities. The infection rate in our sample was 0.001 per cent, a rate that is near the national average outside of Hubei province. None of the villages reported any COVID-19-related deaths. For a full month during the quarantine, the rate of employment of rural workers was essentially zero. Even after the quarantine measures were lifted, nearly 70 per cent of the villagers still were unable to work owing to workplace closures. Although action has been taken to mitigate the potential negative effects, these disease-control measures might have accelerated the inequality between rural and urban households in China.
Job Training, English Language Skills, and Employability: Evidence from an Experiment in Urban India
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
articleOpen accessSSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingJob Training, English Language Skills, and Employability: Evidence from an Experiment in Urban India
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01
articleOpen access1st authorCorresponding2024-03-01 · 1 citations
preprintOpen accessThis paper shares insights from a randomized control trial in Bangladesh that provided tablets with educational software and private tutoring for out-of-school children. The paper finds positive effects on math and Bangla language scores, with an increase of approximately 0.25 standard deviations in math and 0.17 in Bangla. The intervention had a stronger impact on girls and rural children. The findings could help inform programs targeting out-of-school children and distance education during crises like pandemics.
Computers and Education Open · 2024-01-20 · 10 citations
reviewOpen accessDespite the proliferation of education technologies (EdTech) in education, past reviews that examine their effectiveness in the context of low- and middle-income countries are few and rarely seek to include studies published in languages other than English. This systematic review investigates the effectiveness of educational technology on primary and secondary student learning outcomes in China via a systematic search of both English- and Chinese-language databases. Eighteen (18) unique studies in 21 manuscripts on the effectiveness of EdTech innovations in China met the eligibility criteria. The majority of these evaluate computer aided self-led learning software packages designed to improve student learning (computer assisted learning, CAL), while the rest evaluate the use of education technology to improve classroom instruction (ICI) and remote instruction (RI). The pooled effect size of all included studies indicates a small, positive effect on student learning (0.13 SD, 95% CI [0.10, 0.17]). CAL used a supplement to existing educational inputs – which made up the large majority of positive effect sizes – and RI programs consistently showed positive and significant effects on learning. Our findings indicate no significant differences or impacts on the overall effect based on moderating variables such as the type of implementation approach, contextual setting, or school subject area. Taken together, while there is evidence of the positive impacts of two kinds of EdTech (supplemental computer assisted learning and remote instruction) in China, more evidence is needed to determine the effectiveness of other approaches.
Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness · 2024-07-10 · 13 citations
articleSSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01
articleOpen accessJob Training, English Language Skills, and Employability: Evidence from an Experiment in Urban India
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingJob Training, English Language Skills, and Employability: Evidence from an Experiment in Urban India
Economic Development and Cultural Change · 2024-12-17
article1st authorCorrespondingLow-income individuals in developing countries are often inadequately prepared for employment because they lack key labor market skills. We explore how employability and wage outcomes are related to English language skills in a novel, large-scale randomized field experiment conducted in Delhi, India, involving 1,260 low-income individuals. Experimental estimates indicate that a job training program that emphasizes English language skills training substantially increases English language skills as well as employability and estimated wages (as assessed by hiring managers through interviews) for regular jobs and employability for jobs that specifically require English language skills. Program effects hold regardless of gender, social class, or prior employment. We furthermore find that participants enjoy improved employability and estimated wage outcomes because the program improves their English language skills. Taken together, our results suggest that English language skills training, which is surprisingly underutilized in developing countries, may provide considerable economic opportunities for individuals from low-income backgrounds.
Frequent coauthors
- 75 shared
Hongmei Yi
Fuzhou University
- 69 shared
James Chu
Columbia University
- 62 shared
Yaojiang Shi
Shaanxi Normal University
- 62 shared
Linxiu Zhang
- 60 shared
Scott Rozelle
Stanford University
- 48 shared
Yingquan Song
Peking University
- 47 shared
Jianguo Wei
- 34 shared
Xiaoting Huang
Education
Ph.D., Education
Stanford University
M.A., Global Comparative Education
Stanford University
M.S., Education Data Science
Stanford University
B.A., International and Comparative Education
Stanford University
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