1. 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
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