109 results on '"I21"'
Search Results
2. The short-term effects of school consolidation on student achievement: Evidence of disruption?
- Author
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Beuchert, Louise, Humlum, Maria Knoth, Nielsen, Helena Skyt, and Smith, Nina
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SCHOOL centralization , *ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATION , *SCHOOL enrollment , *SHORT run (Economics) - Abstract
We exploit variation stemming from school consolidations in Denmark from 2010 to 2011 to analyze the impact on student achievement as measured by test scores. For each student we observe enrollment and test scores prior to school consolidation and up to four years after. We find that the achievement of students in closing schools is adversely affected in the short run. Furthermore, students initially enrolled in small schools experience the most detrimental effects. The effects appear to weaken over time, suggesting that part of the effect is due to disruption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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3. The Effect of Labor Market Information on Community College Students’ Major Choice.
- Author
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Baker, Rachel, Bettinger, Eric, Jacob, Brian, and Marinescu, Ioana
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LABOR market , *COMMUNITY colleges , *EMPLOYMENT , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
An important goal of community colleges is to prepare students for the labor market. But are students aware of the labor market outcomes in different majors? And how much do students weigh labor market outcomes when choosing a major? In this study we find that less than 15% of a sample of community college students in California rank broad categories of majors accurately in terms of labor market outcomes. Students believe that salaries are 13% higher than they actually are, on average, and students underestimate the probability of being employed by almost 25%. We find that the main determinants of major choice are beliefs about course enjoyment and grades, but expected labor market outcomes also matter. Experimental estimates of the impact of expected labor market outcomes are larger than OLS estimates and show that a 10% increase in salary is associated with a 14 to 18% increase in the probability of choosing a specific category of majors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
- Full Text
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4. How much does teacher quality vary across teacher preparation programs? Reanalyses from six states.
- Author
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von Hippel, Paul T. and Bellows, Laura
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TEACHER effectiveness , *TEACHER education , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *EFFECTIVE teaching - Abstract
At least sixteen US states have taken steps toward holding teacher preparation programs (TPPs) accountable for teacher value-added to student test scores. Yet it is unclear whether teacher quality differences between TPPs are large enough to make an accountability system worthwhile. Several statistical practices can make differences between TPPs appear larger and more significant than they are. We reanalyze TPP evaluations from 6 states—New York, Louisiana, Missouri, Washington, Texas, and Florida—using appropriate methods implemented by our new caterpillar command for Stata. Our results show that teacher quality differences between most TPPs are negligible—.01–0.03 standard deviations in student test scores—even in states where larger differences were reported previously. While ranking all a state's TPPs is not useful, in some states and subjects we can find a single TPP whose teachers are significantly above or below average. Such exceptional TPPs may reward further study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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5. Does the precision and stability of value-added estimates of teacher performance depend on the types of students they serve?
- Author
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Stacy, Brian, Guarino, Cassandra, and Wooldridge, Jeffrey
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TEACHER effectiveness , *PSYCHOLOGY of students , *ACADEMIC ability , *ACADEMIC achievement , *CONFIDENCE intervals - Abstract
In this paper, we investigate how the precision and year-to-year stability of a teacher’s value-added estimate relate to student characteristics. We find that teachers serving initially higher performing students have more precise value-added estimates and in most cases have higher year-to-year stability levels than teachers with lower performing students. We also decompose the variation in value-added estimates into components that reflect persistent and transitory variation in true teacher performance as well as variation caused by imprecision in the estimates. We find that teachers with lower performing students have less precision in their estimates and more transitory variation in value-added from year to year than other teachers. Our estimates imply that if teachers serving initially lower performing students had levels of precision and transitory variation in their value-added estimates equal to those serving higher performing students, the year-to-year stability in their estimates would actually exceed that of teachers with initially higher performing students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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6. The impact of state-mandated Advanced Placement programs on student outcomes.
- Author
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Arce-Trigatti, Paula
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ADVANCED placement programs (Education) , *HIGH schools , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *TECHNICAL education , *GRADUATION (Education) , *PSYCHOLOGY of students - Abstract
This paper examines the effect of a state mandate to offer Advanced Placement (AP) programs at all public high schools on student outcomes. Requiring compliance with this policy could lead to unintended consequences as schools shift resources or students are re-sorted. Using a difference-in-differences estimation strategy, I investigate a 2004 state-wide mandate to offer AP programs in Arkansas and its impact on students’ schooling outcomes. Results suggest schools decrease the share of courses dedicated to career and technical education in favor of AP courses. Additionally, enrollment decreases by about 60 students on average, the 4-year graduation rate increases by 2.5 percentage points, and there are generally fewer students scoring in the highest category on two end-of-course exams at schools required to comply with the mandate. Taken together, these results suggest the policy may have at least partially affected the sorting of students across schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. Does greater primary school autonomy improve pupil attainment? Evidence from primary school converter academies in England✰.
- Author
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Regan-Stansfield, Joseph
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *SCHOOL autonomy , *ENGLISH language education , *EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *PRIMARY schools - Abstract
A recent English education policy has been to encourage state primary schools to become academies: state-funded, non-selective, and highly autonomous establishments. Primary schools have been able to opt-in to academy status since 2010 and academies now account for twenty-one percent of the primary sector. This paper investigates the causal effect of becoming a converter academy on primary school assessment outcomes, and on entry-year intake composition. Unlike existing evidence focused on earlier academies formed from failing secondary schools, no evidence is found of a converter academy effect on attainment for the average pupil. Although, there is evidence of a slight positive effect on age 11 attainment for pupils eligible for free school meals. There is no evidence that becoming a converter academy affects the composition of the entry-year intake. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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8. Admission to higher education programmes and student educational outcomes and earnings–Evidence from Denmark.
- Author
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Heinesen, Eskil
- Subjects
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HIGHER education , *EDUCATIONAL programs , *POSTSECONDARY education , *SCHOOL admission , *SECONDARY schools , *HUMAN capital - Abstract
This paper uses data from the central admission system for Danish post-secondary education merged with other administrative data. Applicants for admission may rank up to eight educational programmes, and I focus on first-time applicants whose first-choice are bachelor's degree university programmes with restricted admission, i.e. with an admission threshold defined in terms of the grade point average obtained from upper secondary school. Using threshold crossing as an instrument for admission in a regression discontinuity design, I find that being admitted to the first-choice programme increases the probability of completing a master's degree in that subject by about 20 percentage points. There is no clear evidence that being admitted to one of the higher degree programmes listed on the application has an effect on years of education or the probability of completing a master's degree (although point estimates indicate small positive effects). There is no robust statistically significant effect on earnings 11 years after application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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9. Do migrant students affect local students’ academic achievements in urban China?
- Author
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Wang, Haining, Cheng, Zhiming, and Smyth, Russell
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EDUCATION , *ACADEMIC achievement , *PUBLIC schools , *TEST scoring , *PSYCHOLOGY of students - Abstract
We examine the educational spillover effects of migrant students on local students’ academic achievement in public middle schools in urban China. The identification of peer effects relies on idiosyncratic variation in the proportion of migrant students across classes within schools. We find that the proportion of migrant students in each class has a small, and positive, effect on local students’ test scores in Chinese, but has no significant effect on math and English test scores. We also find considerable evidence of heterogeneity in the effects of the proportion of students in the class on local students’ test scores across subsamples. Local students toward the bottom of the achievement distribution, local students enrolled in small classes and local students enrolled in lower-ranked schools benefit most in terms of test scores from having a higher proportion of migrant students in their class. Our findings have important policy implications for the debate in China about the inclusion of migrant students in urban schools, and for the assignment of educational resources across schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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10. The causal effect of age at migration on youth educational attainment.
- Author
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Lemmermann, Dominique and Riphahn, Regina T.
- Subjects
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EDUCATIONAL attainment , *AGE differences , *EDUCATION , *LANGUAGE & languages , *SCHOOLS - Abstract
We investigate the causal effect of age at migration on subsequent educational attainment in the destination country. To identify the causal effect we compare the educational attainment of siblings at age 21, exploiting the fact that they typically migrate at different ages within a given family. We consider several education outcomes conditional on family fixed effects. We take advantage of long running and detailed data from the German Socio-Economic Panel, which entails an oversample of immigrants and provides information on language skills. We find significant effects of age at migration on educational attainment and a critical age of migration not above age 6. The educational attainment of female immigrants responds more strongly to a high age at immigration than that of males. While language skills affect educational attainment they do not appear to fully explain the causal connection between age at migration and educational attainment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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11. A ticket to ride: The unintended consequences of school transport subsidies.
- Author
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Masi, Barbara
- Subjects
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TRANSPORTATION of school children , *TRANSPORTATION subsidies , *EDUCATION policy , *POOR people , *SOCIAL status , *ECONOMIC conditions of students - Abstract
This paper provides evidence of the effects of a decrease in the cost of travelling to schools outside the neighbourhood on the choice of school among low income families. I examine a policy reform that occurred in England in academic year 2007/2008, which provided free transport to low socio-economic status (SES) students to schools between 2 and 6 miles away from home only, but not to closer schools. Using confidential panel school micro data, providing information on the postcode of both schools and students’ residence, I find strong evidence of a decline in the probability of attending schools closer than 2 miles. Conversely, the decrease in the cost of travelling affects negatively the quality of the school attended. Consistent with the predictions of a simple theoretical model, results suggest that the negative estimates on quality are driven by students who are willing to trade quality for savings in transport costs. This mechanism is reinforced by school over-subscription combined with distance-based admission criteria, which de facto limits choice to low quality institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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12. Let the girls learn! It is not only about math … it's about gender social norms.
- Author
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Rodríguez-Planas, Núria and Nollenberger, Natalia
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SOCIAL norms , *MATHEMATICS education , *GENDER stereotypes , *COGNITIVE development , *TEST scoring - Abstract
Using PISA test scores from 11,527 second-generation immigrants coming from 35 different countries of ancestry and living in 9 host countries, we find that the positive effects of country-of-ancestry gender social norms on girls’ math test scores relative to those of boys expand to other subjects (namely reading and science). We further find that gender norms shaped by beliefs on women's political empowerment and economic opportunity affect the gender gaps in test scores in general. Interestingly, gender norms do not seem to particularly influence math-related stereotypes, but instead, preferences for math. Finally, the evidence indicates that these findings are driven by cognitive skills, suggesting that social gender norms affect parent's expectations on girls’ academic knowledge relative to that of boys, but not on other attributes for success—such as non-cognitive skills. Taken together, our results highlight the relevance of general (as opposed to math-specific) gender stereotypes on the math gender gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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13. School spirit: Exploring the long-term effects of the U.S. temperance movement on educational attainment.
- Author
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Francis-Tan, Andrew, Tan, Cheryl, and Zhang, Ruhan
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TEMPERANCE movement , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *HIGH school students , *FETAL alcohol syndrome , *DIAGNOSIS , *ALCOHOL drinking ,ALCOHOL drinking prevention - Abstract
This study examines the long-term consequences of the U.S. temperance movement, one of the largest-scale policy changes impacting alcohol consumption in history. Using a sample of persons born between 1900 and 1925 drawn from nationally representative census microdata, the study investigates the effect of prenatal temperance environment on adult educational outcomes. The quantitative analysis uses proxies for temperance environment: the strength of temperance laws and the density of liquor retailers. In sum, the evidence suggests that men and women exposed to the temperance movement in utero had modestly higher education. The effect on eighth grade completion was weakly significant at best, while the effect on high school completion was robustly significant, though relatively small in magnitude. Estimates imply that the adoption of temperance laws increased the odds of high school completion by about 3–8%, and analogously that the reduction of retail liquor density, to the extent it changed from 1913 to 1921, increased the odds of high school completion by about 4–8%. The findings are consistent with several causal mechanisms including a reduction in fetal alcohol exposure and the adverse developmental outcomes with which it is associated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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14. General versus vocational education: Lessons from a quasi-experiment in Croatia.
- Author
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Zilic, Ivan
- Subjects
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VOCATIONAL education , *EDUCATIONAL change , *LABOR market , *STUDENTS , *REGRESSION analysis , *VOCATIONAL guidance - Abstract
This paper identifies the causal effect an educational reform implemented in Croatia in 1975/76 and 1977/78 had on educational and labor market outcomes. High-school education was split into two phases which resulted in reduced tracking, extended general curriculum for students attending vocational training, and an attachment of a vocational context to general high-school programs. Exploiting the rules on elementary school entry and timing of the reform, we use a regression discontinuity design and pooled Labor Force Surveys 2000–2012 to analyze the effect of the reform on educational attainment and labor market outcomes. We observe heterogeneity of the effects of the reform across gender, as for males we find that the probability of completing high school as well as the probability of completing university education decreased, while for females we do not observe any adverse effects. We explain this heterogeneity via different selection into schooling for males and females. The reform did not positively affect individuals’ labor market prospects; therefore, we conclude that the observed general-vocational wage differential is mainly driven by self-selection into the type of high school. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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15. School turnaround in North Carolina: A regression discontinuity analysis.
- Author
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Heissel, Jennifer A. and Ladd, Helen F.
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EDUCATIONAL change , *EDUCATIONAL accountability , *REGRESSION discontinuity design , *TEACHER turnover , *ELEMENTARY school administration , *U.S. states - Abstract
This paper examines the effect of a federally supported school turnaround program in North Carolina elementary and middle schools. Using a regression discontinuity design, we find that the turnaround program did not improve, and may have reduced, average school-level passing rates in math and reading. One potential contributor to that finding appears to be that the program increased the concentration of low-income students in treated schools. Based on teacher survey data, we find that, as was intended, treated schools brought in new principals and increased the time teachers devoted to professional development. At the same time, the program increased administrative burdens and distracted teachers, potentially reducing time available for instruction, and increased teacher turnover after the first full year of implementation. Overall, we find little evidence of success for North Carolina's efforts to turn around low-performing schools under its Race to the Top grant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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16. Does learning trigger learning throughout adulthood? Evidence from training participation of the employed population.
- Author
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Kramer, Anica and Tamm, Marcus
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ADULTS , *EDUCATION & society , *COLLEGE costs , *TALENT management , *EDUCATIONAL finance , *MANAGEMENT , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Individuals with more years of education generally acquire more training later on in life. Such a relationship may be due to skills learned in early periods increasing returns to educational investments in later periods. Using German data, this paper addresses the question whether the complementarity between education and training is causal. The identification is based on exogenous variation in years of education due to the buildup of universities. Results confirm that education has a significant impact on training participation during working life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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17. Do single-sex schools enhance students’ STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) outcomes?
- Author
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Park, Hyunjoon, Behrman, Jere R., and Choi, Jaesung
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STEM education , *SINGLE sex schools , *HIGH school students , *COLLEGE entrance examinations - Abstract
In many countries, males currently lag behind females in schooling attainment but females are still underrepresented in STEM studies. This pattern has raised renewed interest in the potential of single-sex schools for enhancing STEM outcomes. Utilizing the unique setting in Seoul, where assignment to single-sex or coeducational high schools is random, and with multiple years of administrative data from the national college entrance examinations and a longitudinal survey of high school seniors, we assess causal effects of single-sex schools on students’ math test scores and choice of the science-math test. We also assess whether single-sex schools affect students’ interests and self-efficacy in math and science, and expectations and actual choices of a STEM college major in university. We find significantly positive effects of all-boys schools consistently across different STEM outcomes but not for girls. We address one possible mechanism by conducting mediation analysis with the proportion of same-gender math teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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18. TAKS-ing students? Texas exit exam effects on human capital formation.
- Author
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Polson, Chester
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EXIT examinations , *TEXAS Assessment of Knowledge & Skills , *UNITED States education system , *TALENT management , *CLASSROOM environment - Abstract
High-stakes exit exams are pervasive in the American education system and have the ability to affect students far beyond their earned scores. This paper considers how exit exams in Texas affect student motivational responses and classroom behavior before the end of high school. Employing a regression discontinuity framework, I examine the impact of failing the exam the first time it is administered. Considering behavioral responses to the administration of the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS), I study the impact on students’ courses taken, attendance, and disciplinary actions after the exam in the final year of high school. I find that, in line with a model of motivation with heterogeneous effects, some students who fail respond through an increase in the number of courses taken in their senior year, and find a smaller increase in disciplinary infractions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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19. Class meeting frequency, start times, and academic performance.
- Author
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Cotti, Chad, Gordanier, John, and Ozturk, Orgul
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ACADEMIC improvement , *STAFF meetings , *CLASSROOM utilization , *CLASSES (Groups of students) , *RATING of college students - Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between the start time and meeting frequency of college courses and the academic performance of students. Using administrative data from a large public university, we account for both student and instructor fixed effects. Consistent with a large literature, we find a positive time of day effect. That is, students earn higher grades in classes that start later. However, contrary to previous literature, we find students earn higher grades in classes with fewer meeting times when not accounting for instructor fixed effects. This effect is entirely explained by instructor sorting on course schedules. Instructors that assign higher grades, either due to quality of instruction or grade leniency, are more likely to meet twice a week rather than three times a week. Including instructor fixed effects, we find no difference in two-day a week classes and three-day a week classes. However, grades are lower in classes that meet just once a week. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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20. The effects of Montessori education: Evidence from admission lotteries.
- Author
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Ruijs, Nienke
- Subjects
- *
MONTESSORI method of education , *SCHOOL admission , *MONTESSORI schools , *ACADEMIC motivation , *SECONDARY schools - Abstract
This study investigates the causal effects of Montessori secondary education by exploiting admission lotteries in Dutch Montessori schools. Results from 308 to 625 students indicate that Montessori education provides an alternative way to attain similar outcomes. Montessori students obtain their secondary school degree without delay at the same rate and with similar grades as non-Montessori students, although the route towards the exams is somewhat different. Further, Montessori students show similar levels of motivation and do not score better on various measures of independence, even though these are the main characteristics Montessori education claims to foster. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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21. A self-reference problem in test score normalization.
- Author
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Penney, Jeffrey
- Subjects
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TEST scoring , *NORMALIZATION (Sociology) , *ITEM response theory , *REGRESSION analysis , *COEFFICIENTS (Statistics) - Abstract
It is considered standard practice to transform IRT-scaled test scores into standard normal variables for regression analysis in order to enable comparison with other research whose test scores are similarly transformed. This paper calls this practice into question. I show that these transformations can potentially result in radically different estimates of regression parameters due to differences in sample composition. Regression coefficient comparisons between different samples that use z-standardized test scores is only possible if the samples are considered to be random draws from the same population. I outline several different methods to deal with this problem and the caveats attached to each. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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22. Tracking and the intergenerational transmission of education: Evidence from a natural experiment.
- Author
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Lange, Simon and von Werder, Marten
- Subjects
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INTERGENERATIONAL mobility , *EDUCATIONAL change , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *STUDENTS , *EDUCATION of parents - Abstract
Proponents of tracking argue that the creation of more homogeneous classes increases efficiency while opponents point out that tracking aggravates initial differences between students. We estimate the effects on the intergenerational transmission of education of a reform that delayed tracking by two years in one of Germany’s federal states. We argue that while the reform had no effect on educational outcomes on average, it increased educational attainment among men with uneducated parents and decreased attainment among men with educated parents. We also present some suggestive evidence that the reform improved the selection of boys into secondary tracks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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23. Intended college enrollment and educational inequality: Do students lack information?
- Author
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Peter, Frauke H. and Zambre, Vaishali
- Subjects
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COLLEGE enrollment , *COLLEGE students , *COLLEGE costs , *HIGHER education , *DATA analysis - Abstract
Despite increasing access to university education, students from disadvantaged or non-academic family backgrounds are still underrepresented in universities. In this regard, the economics literature has focused on the role of financial constraints as a cause of these observed differences in educational choices. Our knowledge of potential effects of other constraints regarding university education is more limited. We investigate the causal relationship between information and educational expectations using data from a German randomized controlled trial in which students in high schools were given information on the benefits of as well as on different funding possibilities for university education. We find that the provision of information increases intended college enrollment for students from a non-academic family background, both two to three months and one year after the intervention. In contrast, it leads students from academic backgrounds to lower their enrollment intentions in the short run. However, this effect does not persist. Our results suggest that educational inequality can be reduced by providing students from non-academic families with relevant information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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24. The Spanish or the German apartment? Study abroad and the acquisition of permanent skills.
- Author
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Sorrenti, Giuseppe
- Subjects
- *
COLLEGE students , *SEMESTER system in education , *UNIVERSITY & college admission , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *LABOR market , *FINANCE - Abstract
In Europe, more than 250,000 university students spend one or two semesters abroad every year. This study explores whether a short time abroad contributes to the acquisition of foreign language proficiency. We use a newly available dataset about almost the totality of Italian graduates and two alternative instruments to address the endogeneity of studying abroad. Both instruments display similar results. The effect of studying abroad on foreign language proficiency is remarkable, although extremely heterogeneous across languages. Languages more rewarded by the labor market are those that are harder to learn in a short time abroad. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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25. Is college remedial education a worthy investment? New evidence from a sharp regression discontinuity design.
- Author
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Duchini, Emma
- Subjects
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REMEDIAL teaching , *EDUCATION & economics , *REGRESSION analysis , *EDUCATION policy , *COLLEGE students , *FINANCE - Abstract
To enhance college completion, many institutions have introduced college remedial programs. Yet, till now there is little evidence that this policy helps raise students’ persistence and performance in college. To better understand how to design cost-effective remedial education, this paper studies the impact of an intervention implemented in an undergraduate economics program in Italy. This remedial policy aims at raising students’ effort and performance by combining a short remedial course with the threat of re-enrolling them in the first year in case of a failure in the remedial exam. To estimate causal effects, I implement a sharp regression discontinuity design that exploits the cutoff rule used to assign students to remediation. Results indicate that this nudge-type policy fails to obtain any positive and significant effect on either persistence or performance in college. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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26. The impact of special needs students on classmate performance.
- Author
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Ruijs, Nienke
- Subjects
- *
SPECIAL needs students , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SECONDARY education , *FIXED effects model , *INCLUSIVE education - Abstract
Does the presence of special needs students in regular schools affect the academic achievement of their classmates? I examine this question in the context of primary and secondary education in the Netherlands, where the per student budget for special needs students in regular schools is roughly twice the amount of the regular student budget. I use three independent identification approaches: student fixed effects models, school fixed effects models, and neighborhood variation. For both education levels and all three identification approaches, the estimates indicate that special needs students do not have a statistically significant effect on the academic achievement of their classmates. The estimates are precise enough to rule out even modest effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Accountability pressure: Regression discontinuity estimates of how No Child Left Behind influenced student behavior.
- Author
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Holbein, John B. and Ladd, Helen F.
- Subjects
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PSYCHOLOGY of students , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SCHOOL failure , *MINORITY students ,NO Child Left Behind Act of 2001 - Abstract
In this paper we examine how failing to make adequate yearly progress under No Child Left Behind (NCLB), and the accountability pressure that ensues, affects various non-achievement student behaviors. Using administrative data from North Carolina and leveraging a discontinuity in the determination of school failure, we examine the causal impact of this form of accountability pressure both on student behaviors that are incentivized by NCLB and on those that are not. We find evidence that, as NCLB intends, pressure encourages students to show up at school and to do so on time. Accountability pressure also appears to have the unintended effect, however, of increasing the number of student misbehaviors. Further, we find some evidence that this negative response is most pronounced among minorities and low performing students: those who are the most likely to be left behind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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28. Compressing instruction time into fewer years of schooling and the impact on student performance.
- Author
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Huebener, Mathias and Marcus, Jan
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *EDUCATIONAL change , *GRADE repetition , *GRADE point average - Abstract
Is it possible to compress instruction time into fewer school years without lowering education levels? A fundamental reform in Germany reduced the length of academic track schooling by one year, while increasing instruction hours in the remaining school years to provide students with a very similar core curriculum and the same overall instruction time. Using aggregated administrative data on the full population of students, we find that the reform increases grade repetition rates and lowers final grade point averages, without affecting graduation rates. The results suggest adverse reform effects on student performance, but the economic significance of the effects appears moderate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Does temporary interruption in postsecondary education induce a wage penalty? Evidence from Canada.
- Author
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Fortin, Bernard and Ragued, Safa
- Subjects
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POSTSECONDARY education , *WAGES , *HETEROSCEDASTICITY , *QUANTILE regression - Abstract
Almost 40% of Canadian youth who left postsecondary education in 1999 had returned two years later. This paper investigates the extent to which schooling discontinuities affect post-graduation starting wages and whether the latter are influenced by the reasons behind these discontinuities. We use data from the 2007 National Graduate Survey. We apply Lewbel’s (2012) generated instruments approach. The source of identification is a heteroscedastic covariance restriction of the error terms that is a feature of many models of endogeneity. We also perform two-stage quantile regressions. We find a positive effect on wages of temporary interruption for men who held a full-time job during their out-of-school spell(s). Both men and women witness a wage decrease if their interruption depends on health issues. Women bear a wage penalty if their interruption is due to a part-time job, to lack of money, or is caused by reasons other than health, work, and money. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The effect of adaptive versus static practicing on student learning - evidence from a randomized field experiment.
- Author
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van Klaveren, Chris, Vonk, Sebastiaan, and Cornelisz, Ilja
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SECONDARY schools , *LEARNING theories in education , *TEST scoring , *FORMATIVE tests , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements - Abstract
Schools and governments are increasingly investing in adaptive practice software. To date, the evidence whether adaptivity improves learning outcomes is limited and mixed. A large-scale randomized control trial is conducted in Dutch secondary schools to evaluate the effectiveness of an adaptive practice program relative to a static program. Learning theories predict that adaptive practicing is more effective, but this experimental evaluation provides a more nuanced picture. Relative to the static software environment, students working in the adaptive software environment receive more difficult exercises, practice longer and answer fewer questions correctly. Takeup and usage of the software program is, overall, modest, but varies considerably within and between classrooms. The outcome differences between both environments are more pronounced in classrooms with higher practice intensity. On average, no test score effects are found, but static practicing does improve test scores for higher ability students (0.08 σ ). Caution is thus warranted when adaptive practice software is implemented to address individual learning needs, as static formative test preparation can be more effective in improving test scores. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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31. Effects of differentiated school vouchers: Evidence from a policy change and date of birth cutoffs.
- Author
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Navarro-Palau, Patricia
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL vouchers , *SCHOOL choice , *PUBLIC schools , *TEST scoring , *EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
This paper studies the effects of an increase in school choice by examining a 2008 reform that made the value of Chile’s (previously flat, universal) school voucher a step function of student income. This policy increased the number of private schools that low income children could access free of charge. I identify the impact of the policy by combining its introduction with variation from a date of birth enrollment cutoff. I show that the differentiated voucher lowered, but only slightly, the probability that students used public schools. Students more likely to move to private schools experienced better school characteristics but no increase in test scores. Further analysis suggests a rise in test scores for students most likely to stay in public schools. These results suggest that the effects of the policy on test scores were caused by responses from public schools, instead of by the re-sorting of students into private schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Is it the way they use it? Teachers, ICT and student achievement.
- Author
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Comi, Simona Lorena, Argentin, Gianluca, Gui, Marco, Origo, Federica, and Pagani, Laura
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION & communication technologies , *ACADEMIC achievement , *TENTH grade (Education) , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *DATA analysis - Abstract
We provide evidence on whether ICT-related teaching practices affect student achievement. We use a unique student-teacher dataset containing variables on a wide set of very specific uses of computer and ICT by teachers matched with data on national standardized tests for 10th grade students. Our identification strategy relies on a within-student between-subject estimator and on a rich set of teacher's controls. We find that computer-based teaching methods increase student performance when they increase students’ awareness in ICT use and when they enhance communication. Instead, we find a negative impact of practices requiring an active role of the students in classes using ICT. Our findings suggest that the effectiveness of ICT at school depends on the actual practice that teachers make of it and on their ability to integrate ICT into their teaching process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Creating winners and losers: Date of birth, relative age in school, and outcomes in childhood and adulthood.
- Author
-
Peña, Pablo A.
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL change , *OUTCOME assessment (Education) , *LABOR market , *EXTERNALITIES - Abstract
Using an unanticipated policy reform that shifted 4 months the cutoff date for school eligibility in the state of Tlaxcala, Mexico, we estimate the effect of relative age on test scores in grades 3–9. Different identification strategies produce similar results: 1 year of additional age confers an advantage of roughly 0.3 standard deviations. By contrasting Tlaxcala with a neighboring state that did not change the cutoff concurrently, we decompose the effect of relative age into a positive effect of age at test, and a negative effect of the position in the distribution of age. Older classmates have a positive spillover, whereas younger classmates have a negative spillover. If tested at the exact same age, younger students would outperform their older classmates. We complement the analysis with estimates of relative-age effects in six labor and marriage market outcomes in a sample of Mexican adults. Significant effects are found in the six outcomes. Lastly, we lay out a theoretical model to explain differences in relative-age effects in wages across countries, highlighting the role played by selectivity of the mechanisms used to allocate educational opportunities and the wage premium to those educational opportunities in the labor market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Doing it twice, getting it right? The effects of grade retention and course repetition in higher education.
- Author
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Tafreschi, Darjusch and Thiemann, Petra
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education , *EDUCATION & economics , *CURRICULUM , *ACADEMIC achievement , *PERFORMANCE evaluation - Abstract
Many students who enter college are insufficiently prepared to follow a demanding college-level curriculum. Thus, higher education institutions often require low-performing students to repeat failed courses, a full term, or even a full year. This paper is the first to investigate the effects of such a “(grade) retention” policy on student performance in higher education. We study a setting where first-year undergraduates who fall short of a pre-defined performance requirement have to repeat all first-year courses before they can proceed to the second year. To determine the causal effect of retention and repetition on student performance, we apply a sharp regression discontinuity design to administrative data from a Swiss university. Based on a sample of 5000 students, we find that grade retention increases dropout probabilities after the first year by about 10 percentage points. Repetition of a full year persistently boosts grade point averages by about 0.5 standard deviations, but does not affect study pace and major choices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Motivation and incentives in education: Evidence from a summer reading experiment.
- Author
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Guryan, Jonathan, Kim, James S., and Park, Kyung H.
- Subjects
- *
SUMMER reading programs , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *EDUCATIONAL psychology , *POLICY sciences , *EDUCATION & economics , *COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
Policymakers and economists have expressed support for the use of incentives in educational settings. In this paper, rather than asking whether incentives work, we focus on a different question: For whom and under what conditions do incentives work? This question is particularly important because incentives’ promise relies on the idea that they might take the place of some cognitive failing or set of preferences that otherwise would have led students to make choices with large long-term benefits. In this paper, we explore whether that is the case. In the context of a summer reading program called Project READS, we test whether responsiveness to incentives is positively or negatively related to the student's baseline level of motivation to read. As a part of the program, elementary school students are mailed books weekly during the summer. We implemented this book-mailing program as a randomized experiment with three treatment arms. Students in the first treatment arm were mailed books as a part of the standard Project READS program. Students in the second treatment arm were mailed books as a part of Project READS, and were also offered an incentive to read the books they were mailed. Students in the third experimental group served as a control and were given books after posttesting occurred in the fall. We find that, if anything, more motivated readers are more responsive to incentives to read, suggesting that to the extent that incentives are effective, they may not effectively target the students whose behavior they are intended to change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The effect of supplemental instruction on academic performance: An encouragement design experiment.
- Author
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Paloyo, Alfredo R., Rogan, Sally, and Siminski, Peter
- Subjects
- *
UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *ENCOURAGEMENT , *SOCIAL capital , *EDUCATIONAL programs , *QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
Supplemental Instruction (SI) or PASS (Peer Assisted Study Sessions) has been widely offered to students at tertiary institutions in many countries with the aim of improving academic performance. The SI/PASS evaluation literature is extensive, but it has not adequately addressed potential selection bias. We evaluate an SI/PASS program at an Australian university through a randomized-encouragement-design experiment. A randomly selected subgroup of students from first-year courses ( N = 6954) was offered large incentives (worth AUD 55,000) to attend PASS which increased attendance by an estimated 0.47 hours each. This first-stage (inducement) effect did not vary with the size of the incentive and was larger (0.89) for students from disadvantaged backgrounds. Instrumental-variable estimates suggest that 1 hour of PASS improved grades by 0.065 standard deviations, which is consistent with the non-experimental literature. However, this estimate is not statistically significant, reflecting limited statistical power. The estimated effect is largest for students in their first semester at university. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Should we increase instruction time in low achieving schools? Evidence from Southern Italy.
- Author
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Battistin, Erich and Meroni, Elena Claudia
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOLS , *MATHEMATICS education , *CLASS formation , *EDUCATION & economics , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
This paper investigates the short term effects of a large scale intervention, funded by the European Social Fund, which provides additional instruction time to selected classes of lower secondary schools in Southern Italy. Selection is addressed using institutional rules that regulate class formation: first year students are divided into groups distinguished by letters, they remain in the same group across grades at the school, and the composition of teachers assigned to groups is stable over time. Using a difference-in-differences strategy, we consider consecutive cohorts of first year students enrolled in the same group. We compare participating groups to non-participating groups within the same school, as well as to groups in non-participating schools. We find that the intervention raised scores in mathematics for students from the least advantaged backgrounds. We also find that targeting the best students with extra activities in language comes at the cost of lowering performance in mathematics. We go beyond average effects, finding that the positive effect for mathematics is driven by larger effects for the best students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Gender, ethnicity and teaching evaluations: Evidence from mixed teaching teams.
- Author
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Wagner, Natascha, Rieger, Matthias, and Voorvelt, Katherine
- Subjects
- *
EVALUATION of teaching , *STUDENT evaluation of teachers , *MULTICULTURALISM , *CURRICULUM , *EDUCATIONAL leadership - Abstract
This paper studies the effect of teacher gender and ethnicity on student evaluations of teaching at university. We analyze a unique data-set featuring mixed teaching teams and a diverse, multicultural, multi-ethnic group of students and teachers. Blended co-teaching allows us to study the link between student evaluations of teaching and teacher gender as well as ethnicity exploiting within course variation in a panel data model with course-year fixed effects. We document a negative effect of being a female teacher on student evaluations of teaching, which amounts to roughly one fourth of the sample standard deviation of teaching scores. Overall women are 11 percentage points less likely to attain the teaching evaluation cut-off for promotion to associate professor compared to men. The effect is robust to a host of co-variates such as course leadership, teacher experience and research quality, as well as an alternative teacher fixed effect specification. There is no evidence of a corresponding ethnicity effect. Our results are suggestive of a gender bias against female teachers and indicate that the use of teaching evaluations in hiring and promotion decisions may put female lectures at a disadvantage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Separating state dependence, experience, and heterogeneity in a model of youth crime and education.
- Author
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Mancino, Maria Antonella, Navarro, Salvador, and Rivers, David A.
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION & crime , *DISCRETE choice models , *JUVENILE delinquency , *DECISION making , *JUVENILE offenders - Abstract
We study the determinants of youth crime using a dynamic discrete choice model of crime and education. We allow past education and criminal activities to affect current crime and educational decisions. We take advantage of a rich panel dataset on serious juvenile offenders, the Pathways to Desistance. Using a series of psychometric tests, we estimate a model of cognitive and social/emotional skills which feed into the crime and education model. This allows us to separately identify the roles of state dependence, returns to experience, and heterogeneity in driving crime and enrollment decisions among youth. We find small effects of experience and stronger evidence of state dependence and heterogeneity for crime and schooling. We provide evidence that, as a consequence, policies that affect individual heterogeneity (e.g., social/emotional skills), and those that temporarily keep youth away from crime, can have important and lasting effects even if criminal experience has already accumulated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The role of testing noise in the estimation of achievement-based peer effects.
- Author
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Zhang, Hongliang
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement , *PROBLEM solving , *EDUCATIONAL quality , *MEASUREMENT errors , *EDUCATIONAL background - Abstract
I demonstrate that in the value-added estimation of peer effects using lagged peer achievement, testing noise may generate another bias in addition to the well-known attenuation bias. Such a bias, which I refer to as the “reversion bias,” may arise when some of a student’s current peers happen to be his/her former peers whose performances in the baseline test were subject to the same common testing noise as the student's own. I propose a solution to overcome this problem by exploiting only the variation in the new peers’ portion of the overall peer quality. Using real-world data, I illustrate the existence of this bias and demonstrate the proposed solution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Improving academic performance through conditional benefits: Open/closed campus policies in high school and student outcomes.
- Author
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Lichtman-Sadot, Shirlee
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement , *HIGH school dropouts , *OUTCOME assessment (Education) , *GRADE point average , *EDUCATIONAL background - Abstract
Open campus privileges in high schools can be conditional on students’ academic (GPA, test scores, etc.) or behavioral (absences, probation, etc.) performance. I evaluate the effectiveness of this incentive scheme in improving student academic outcomes using a dataset covering over 460 California high schools over a 10-year period and their open/closed campus policies, while distinguishing between conditional and unconditional open campus policies. The results show an increase of roughly 0.1 of a standard deviation in student test scores when a conditional open campus policy is in place, in comparison to an unconditional open campus policy, thus suggesting that the incentive scheme intended by the conditional open campus policy is effective as a means for improving student test score outcomes. While the incentive scheme seems to improve test outcomes both for high and low-performing students, the magnitude of the effect is greater for lower-performing students, which is consistent with the fact that the academic thresholds under the conditional open campus policies are generally very minimal. The evidence also suggests that the incentive scheme is more effective for 9 th and 10 th grade students than it is for 11 th grade students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Unintended consequences of rewards for student attendance: Results from a field experiment in Indian classrooms.
- Author
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Visaria, Sujata, Dehejia, Rajeev, Chao, Melody M., and Mukhopadhyay, Anirban
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL attendance , *REWARD (Psychology) , *SLUMS , *OPTIMISM , *CONFIDENCE - Abstract
In an experiment in non-formal schools in Indian slums, a reward scheme for attending a target number of school days increased average attendance when the scheme was in place, but had heterogeneous effects after it was removed. Among students with high baseline attendance, the incentive had no effect on attendance after it was discontinued, and test scores were unaffected. Among students with low baseline attendance, the incentive lowered post-incentive attendance, and test scores decreased. For these students, the incentive was also associated with lower interest in school material and lower optimism and confidence about their ability. This suggests incentives might have unintended long-term consequences for the very students they are designed to help the most. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Time preferences, study effort, and academic performance.
- Author
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Non, Arjan and Tempelaar, Dirk
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement , *ECONOMICS students , *BUSINESS students , *MOBILE learning , *ONLINE education - Abstract
We analyze the relation between time preferences, study effort, and academic performance among first-year business and economics students. Time preferences are measured by stated preferences for an immediate payment over larger delayed payments. Data on study efforts are derived from an electronic learning environment, which records the amount of time students are logged in, the number of exercises generated, and the fraction of topics completed. Another measure of study effort is participation in an online summer course. We find no statistically significant relationship between impatience and study effort. However, we find that impatient students obtain lower grades and fail final exams more often, suggesting that impatient students are of lower unmeasured ability. Impatient students do not earn significantly fewer study credits, nor are they more likely to drop out as a result of earning fewer study credits than required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The effects of compulsory military service exemption on education and labor market outcomes: Evidence from a natural experiment.
- Author
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Torun, Huzeyfe and Tumen, Semih
- Subjects
- *
DRAFT (Military service) , *LABOR market , *ACADEMIC degrees , *EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
Based on a law enacted in November 1999, males born on or before December 31st 1972 are given the option to benefit from a paid exemption from compulsory military service in Turkey. Exploiting this natural experiment, we devise an empirical strategy to estimate the intention-to-treat effect of this paid exemption on education and labor market outcomes of the individuals in the target group. We find that the paid exemption reform reduces the years of schooling among males who are eligible to benefit from the reform relative to the ineligible males. In particular, the probability of receiving a college degree or above falls among the eligible males. The result is robust to alternative estimation strategies. We find no reduction in education when we implement the same exercises with ( i ) data on females and ( ii ) placebo reform dates. The interpretation is that the reform has reduced the incentives to continue education for the purpose of deferring military service. We also find suggestive evidence that the paid exemption reform reduces the labor income for males in the target group. The reduction in earnings is likely due to the reduction in education. It should be noted, however, that due to the characteristics of the population on the treatment margin, the external validity of these results should be assessed cautiously. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Good peers or good teachers? Evidence from a French University.
- Author
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Brodaty, Thibault and Gurgand, Marc
- Subjects
- *
UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *ACADEMIC achievement , *COLLEGE teachers , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *EDUCATIONAL background - Abstract
Using a quasi-random allocation of students to classes in a French university, we are able to estimate peer effects and teacher effects, with a specific attention to non-linear peer effects. We find that teacher effects are strong, as found at other levels of the education system, but that peer effects have very limited impact. This implies that restricting student access to some universities is of no benefit to remaining students in terms of academic performance. In contrast, attention to teacher performance should be strong at the higher education level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The importance of family income in the formation and evolution of non-cognitive skills in childhood.
- Author
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Fletcher, Jason M. and Wolfe, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
INCOME , *SOCIAL status , *CHILDREN'S health , *COGNITIVE ability , *PANEL analysis - Abstract
Little is known about the relationship between family income and children's non-cognitive (or socio-emotional) skill formation. This is an important gap, as these skills have been hypothesized to be a critical link between early outcomes and adult socioeconomic status. This paper presents new evidence of the importance of family income in the formation and evolution of children's non-cognitive skills using a recent US panel dataset that tracks children between grades K-5. Findings suggest an important divergence in non-cognitive skills based on family income that accumulates over time and does not seem to be explained by children's health status differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Causal effects of mental health treatment on education outcomes for youth in the justice system.
- Author
-
Cuellar, Alison and Dave, Dhaval M.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health services for youth , *SCHOOL dropouts , *OUTCOME assessment (Education) , *EMPIRICAL research , *TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
This study assesses whether mental health interventions can improve academic outcomes for justice-involved youth. Only a limited number of studies have linked justice policies to outcomes beyond crime, particularly education, which carries large monetary and non-monetary benefits. The current study relies on detailed administrative data and unique policy rules under which youth are assigned to behavioral treatment programs. The administrative data allow for a rich set of controls for observed family- and youth-specific heterogeneity. In addition, the treatment assignment rules create discontinuous thresholds among youth who are deemed eligible or not eligible for treatment, rules which the study exploits empirically to address the non-random selection bias in estimating plausibly causal effects of treatment eligibility and treatment receipt. Estimates indicate that certain types of intensive mental health intervention can lower dropout and increase high-school completion for justice-involved youth. Effects on grades are negative or not significant, possibly due to the greater retention of less academically-skilled students. We also assess heterogeneity in the treatment effects, and find that the effects on dropout tend to be greater among youth believed to be less academically engaged prior to treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Bilingual education in Peru: Evidence on how Quechua-medium education affects indigenous children's academic achievement.
- Author
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Hynsjö, Disa and Damon, Amy
- Subjects
- *
BILINGUAL education , *ACADEMIC achievement , *PERUVIAN poetry , *SCHOOLS , *MATHEMATICS education , *INDIGENOUS children - Abstract
This study uses the Peruvian Young Lives International Study of Childhood Poverty's School Level data to investigate the effect of Quechua-medium instruction on academic achievement. We find that Indigenous children who attend Quechua-medium schools achieve 0.429 standard deviations higher scores in mathematics compared to Indigenous children who attend Spanish-medium schools. There is no evidence that these effects are caused by quantitative or language achievement acquired prior to entering school. Our findings suggest that Quechua-medium education for children of Quechua speaking parents may play a role in ameliorating the Indigenous test score gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Do `Skills Beget Skills'? Evidence on the effect of kindergarten entrance age on the evolution of cognitive and non-cognitive skill gaps in childhood.
- Author
-
Lubotsky, Darren and Kaestner, Robert
- Subjects
- *
KINDERGARTEN , *SCHOOL entrance age , *COGNITIVE ability , *FIRST grade (Education) , *SCHOOLS , *HUMAN capital - Abstract
We use exogenous variation in the skills that children have at the beginning of kindergarten to measure the extent to which “skills beget skills” in this context. Children who are relatively older when they begin kindergarten score higher on measures of cognitive and non-cognitive achievement at the beginning of kindergarten. Their scores on cognitive assessments grow faster during kindergarten and first grade. However, after first grade the scores of younger entrants catch up. We find no evidence that the growth in non-cognitive measures differs between older and younger entrants. Finally, we provide evidence suggesting that schools are not the cause of the younger students’ faster growth after first grade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The relative benefits of live versus online delivery: Evidence from virtual algebra I in North Carolina.
- Author
-
Heissel, Jennifer
- Subjects
- *
ONLINE education , *ALGEBRA education , *VIRTUAL classrooms , *CURRICULUM , *MIDDLE schools - Abstract
Over one million K-12 students pursue virtual education every year, but researchers know very little about the effectiveness of such programs. This paper exploits a district policy change that suddenly shifted advanced eighth graders into a virtual classroom for Algebra I. After the policy, higher-ability eighth graders in the treatment district began taking Algebra I in the virtual classroom at rates similar to the statewide average of their peers in traditional classrooms. The change in course delivery provides a unique opportunity to study effects of a virtual course on academic outcomes. The analysis uses variation in program uptake across performance quintile, district, and year in a difference-in-difference-in-difference approach to estimate the causal effect of the virtual course, finding that eighth grade virtual students tend to underperform relative to eighth graders who took Algebra I in a traditional classroom and relative to pre-policy, same-district students who had to take the course in ninth grade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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