High-school exit examinations and the schooling decisions of
High-school exit examinations and the schooling decisions of teenagers
Rate this book:
About This Book
"We ask whether failing one or more of the state-mandated high-school exit examinations affects whether students graduate from high school. Using a new multi-dimensional regression-discontinuity approach, we examine simultaneously scores on mathematics and English language arts tests. Barely passing both examinations, as opposed to failing them, increases the probability that students graduate by 7.6 percentage points. The effects are greater for students scoring near each cutoff than for students further away from them. We explain how the multi-dimensional regression-discontinuity approach provides insights over conventional methods for making causal inferences when multiple variables assign individuals to a range of treatments"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by John P. Papay
Does practice-based teacher pr
Does practice-based teacher preparation increase student achievement?
Leading the local
Leading the local
The consequences of high schoo
The consequences of high school exit examinations for struggling low-income urban students
The price of just failing
The price of just failing
The unintended consequences of
The unintended consequences of standardized test performance labeling on students' educational investment decisions