Principal Investigator: | Daniel G. Schroeder, PhD |
Sponsor: | Office of the Attorney General of Texas |
Project Duration: | June 2024 – August 2026 |
Description: | The Texas Child Support Guidelines project is being conducted by the Ray Marshall Center under an agreement with the Office of the Attorney General of Texas (OAG). Federal and state laws require the OAG to establish guidelines for child support, and to review these guidelines every four years to ensure their adequacy in determining appropriate child support award amounts in divorce cases and other suits affecting parent-child relations (SAPCR). The review will utilize up to date, detailed economic analysis of the cost of raising children in Texas to 1) determine whether the existing guidelines result in fair child support award amounts, and to 2) propose a workable income-shares model to develop new guidelines that take into account both parents’ income levels. Additional topics to be addressed include how to handle parenting-time adjustments, child care costs, and whether a true limit to child support exists, and at what level it should be set. |
Reports Available: |
Self-Sufficiency Wage Data Study
Principal Investigators: | Greg Cumpton, PhD |
Sponsor: | Texas Workforce Commission |
Project Duration: | May 2023 – December 2026 |
Description: | Pursuant to the Texas Workforce Commission’s (TWC) duties under Government Code, Chapter 2308A (enacted in House Bill 3767, 87th Legislature), the TWC has entered a partnership with the Ray Marshall Center (RMC) to implement its duty to establish a self-sufficiency wage for each Texas county. RMC will study Texas family compositions and suggest improvements, and study current labor market conditions and how it relates to the Self-Sufficiency Wage. |
Reports Available: |
Workforce Development Evaluation
Principal Investigators: | Greg Cumpton, PhD |
Sponsor: | City of Austin |
Project Duration: | March 2023 – December 2026 |
Description: | The City of Austin has contracted with the Ray Marshall Center (RMC) to conduct an evaluation of the City’s workforce training investments. The purpose of this study is to identify within the City of Austin funded workforce development training ecosystem, programmatic or strategic elements that impact participant outcomes. Research findings will be used to guide strategic planning for the City’s workforce development efforts. |
Reports Available: | Evaluation of the City of Austin Investment in Workforce Development: 2023 Annual Report Authors: Cynthia Juniper, Thomas Boswell, and Greg Cumpton, Principal Investigator Date: December 2023 Publication Type: Report, 41 pp. |
AT Home Initiative Evaluation
Principal Investigators: | Greg Cumpton, PhD |
Sponsor: | Ending Community Homelessness Coalition (ECHO) |
Project Duration: | March 2023 – December 2027 |
Description: | In coordination with ECHO, the Ray Marshall Center (RMC) will execute the planning and preparation needed to conduct the evaluation of the AT Home Initiative. |
Reports Available: |
Child Care Market Rate/Cost of Quality Studies
Principal Investigators: | Daniel G. Schroeder, PhD (Principal Investigator) – Ray Marshall Center Monica Faulkner (Principal Investigator), Laura Marra (Co-Principal Investigator) – Texas Institute for Child and Family Wellbeing |
Sponsor: | Texas Workforce Commission |
Project Duration: | July 2022 – June 2025 |
Description: | Researchers at The University of Texas at Austin will provide services in order to complete two annual studies for the Texas Workforce Commission. The Texas Institute for Child and Family Wellbeing at the Steve Hicks School of Social Work will manage data collection from child care providers. The Ray Marshall Center at the LBJ School of Public Affairs manages the data analysis and reporting.
The purpose of the Child Care Market Rate Study is to create statistical summaries of market rates for child care for the entire state of Texas and for each of the 28 Local Workforce Development Areas. The purpose of the Cost of Quality Study is to understand the cost of providing quality child care in the state of Texas. The purpose is to provide estimates of how much more additional funding, in terms of daily rates, should be paid to providers who meet quality standards to care for children, relative to how much providers who meet minimal standards are paid. |
Reports Available: | The reports for this project are published through the Texas Institute for Child & Family Wellbeing at the University of Texas at Austin’s Steve Hicks School of Social Work. The following reports are available on their website.
2023 Texas Child Care Market Rate Survey |
Hire Local Evaluation
Principal Investigator: | Greg Cumpton, PhD |
Sponsor: | Workforce Solutions Capital Area |
Project Duration: | April 2022 – December 2024 |
Description: | The Ray Marshall Center has partnered with Workforce Solutions Capital Area to provide services to collect, analyze, and report data outcomes under the Hire Local Plan. |
Reports Available: |
CAREER Project Evaluation
Principal Investigator: | Greg Cumpton, PhD |
Sponsor: | Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce |
Project Duration: | February 2022 – May 2024 |
Description: | The CAREER Project (Trellis Foundation’s Regional Ecosystem Innovation for Reskilling/Upskilling in Texas) aims to create a network of postsecondary and employment support for individuals in the Central Texas community impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic by building out widescale infrastructure like a referral map and integrated marketing and data efforts. The Ray Marshall Center has partnered with the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce to evaluate the CAREER Project. |
Reports Available: |
Evaluation of the Building Construction Trades Grantees
Principal Investigator: | Heath J. Prince, PhD |
Sponsor: | Texas Workforce Commission |
Project Duration: | December 2021 – November 2024 |
Description: | The Ray Marshall Center for the Study of Human Resources has partnered with the Texas Workforce Commission to conduct an evaluation of the Building Construction Trades Grantees Program, including assessing participant outcomes, program implementation, and participant and employer feedback on the programs. |
Reports Available: |
Pathways Taken By Opportunity Youth in San Antonio (UP)
Principal Investigator: | Heath J. Prince, PhD |
Sponsor: | UP Partnership |
Project Duration: | October 2021 – August 2026 |
Description: | Through a partnership with the UP Partnership and the Aspen Institute, the RMC will engage in a data-driven longitudinal study following Opportunity Youth (OY) in San Antonio into either the labor market or postsecondary education (or both) between Fall 2021 and Summer 2026 to map out the pathways taken by OY. This study will begin tracking OY at the point that they exit OY programs. In addition, and in order to gain a fuller understanding of the entire OY population, we will identify the total population of OY in an area (based on high school of graduation) through data collected from the Education Research Center (ERC). We will also submit a request to the ERC to upload participant data we collect from OY programs in order to compare the difference in the relative size of the OY population receiving and not receiving services. This partnership is motivated by several research questions:
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Associated Projects: | Pathways Taken By Opportunity Youth Pathways Taken By Opportunity Youth in San Antonio (Aspen) |
Reports Available: |
Pathways Taken By Opportunity Youth
Principal Investigator: | Heath J. Prince, PhD |
Sponsor: | JPMorgan Chase |
Project Duration: | August 2021 – August 2026 |
Description: | With the support of JPMorgan Chase, the Ray Marshall Center will study the pathways taken by Opportunity Youth in Austin, Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio. This five-year grant represents one of the largest efforts undertaken in Texas to date to study the systems that serve, and the trajectories taken by, disconnected young adults (between the ages of 18 and 24 who are neither enrolled in school nor working) after participation in a youth-serving program. The study aims to determine the size of the OY population in each of these cities, as well as measure programmatic impact in terms of employment and/or enrollment in postsecondary education. In addition to providing a clearer picture of the OY landscape, it is our expectation that the study findings will inform OY policy for the state. |
Associated Projects: | Pathways Taken By Opportunity Youth in San Antonio (Aspen) Pathways Taken By Opportunity Youth in San Antonio (UP) |
Reports Available: |