Why does Pathways Clearinghouse list a portion of the samples for some studies as being of an unknown, not reported, or another race or ethnicity?

Individuals within the study sample could fall into these categories because they chose not to identify their race, because the authors did not collect or report race and ethnicity data, or because the individual identified with a race other than one of the federal categories.

Why do the race and ethnicity totals sum to more than 100 percent for some studies?

The Pathways Clearinghouse strives to present a complete set of race and ethnicity data for each study, in accordance with the federal standards for classifying data on race and ethnicity. In practice, for most studies this means that an individual can fall only into single race or ethnicity category. For example, a person would identify as either Hispanic or Black, but not both.

Sharing the Pathways to Work Evidence Clearinghouse with TANF Administrators

On Wednesday, August 12, 2020, the Pathways Clearinghouse held a webinar for TANF administrators about how the Pathways Clearinghouse supports their work. Designed to meet the needs of employment service providers and TANF administrators and support the use of evidence-based practices, the Pathways Clearinghouse provides trustworthy, accessible information about what works to help job seekers with low incomes find and sustain employment. During this discussion, a panel of experts from Mathematica and OPRE:

Introducing the Pathways to Work Evidence Clearinghouse: Launch Event Recording

On Wednesday, July 15, from 2:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m. (ET), Mathematica and the Office of Planning, Research, and Evaluation (OPRE) in the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) unveiled the Pathways to Work Evidence Clearinghouse, a new resource for employment service providers designed to support the use of evidence-based practices. Watch the event recording which includes a virtual tour of the Pathways Clearinghouse website as well as a discussion of how the site: