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: Indoor Air Pollution & Student Performance
Indoor Air Pollution & Student Performance
2020-01-09 15:48:17.33083+01 by
Dan Lyke
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Installing air filters in classrooms has surprisingly large educational
benefits
That’s what NYU’s Michael Gilraine finds in a new working paper
titled “Air Filters, Pollution, and Student
Achievement” that looks at the surprising consequences of the Aliso Canyon gas leak in 2015.
The impact of the air filters is strikingly large given what a simple change
we’re talking about. The school district didn’t reengineer the school
buildings or make
dramatic education reforms; they just installed $700 commercially available filters that
you could plug into any room in the country. But it’s consistent with a growing literature on the cognitive impact of air pollution, which finds that
everyone from chess
players to baseball umpires to
workers in a pear-packing factory suffer
deteriorations in performance when the air is more polluted.
Related: ‘I Simply Cannot Justify Staying
Here’: Google Engineer Encourages Workers To Avoid Pittsburgh Over Air Quality
Concerns
[ related topics:
Children and growing up Invention and Design Theater & Plays Work, productivity and environment Sports Education Architecture Conferences Model Building
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