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Experimental Estimates of Education Production Functions

TLDR
The authors analyzed data from Project STAR, an experiment in which 11,600 Tennessee kindergarten students and teachers were randomly assigned to one of three types of classes beginning in the 1985-86 school year: small classes (13-17 students), regular-size classes (22-25 students), and teacher's aide.
Abstract
This paper analyzes data from Project STAR, an experiment in which 11,600 Tennessee kindergarten students and teachers were randomly assigned to one of three types of classes beginning in the 1985-86 school year: small classes (13-17 students), regular-size classes (22-25 students) teacher's aide. According to the original design, students were to remain in their initial class type through the third grade. In practice, however, students in regular-size classes were randomly re-assigned at the end of kindergarten, and about 10 percent of students moved between class types in second and third grade. Attrition was also common. Several statistical methods are used to investigate the impact of these limitations. The main conclusions are: (1) on average, performance on standardized tests increases by about 4 percentile points the first year students are assigned to a small class, irrespective of the grade in which the student first attends a small class; (2) after initial assignment to a small class, student performance increases by about one percentile point per year relative to those in regular-size classes; (3) teacher aides have little effect on student achievement; (4) class size has a larger effect on test scores for minority students and for those on free lunch; (5) the beneficial effect of smaller classes does not appear to result from Hawthorne effects.

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Posted ContentDOI

Human Capital Policy

TL;DR: This paper showed the importance of cognitive and non-cognitive skills that are formed early in the life cycle in accounting for racial, ethnic and family background gaps in schooling and other dimensions of socioeconomic success.
Posted Content

Experimental Estimates of Education Production Functions

TL;DR: This paper analyzed data on 11,600 students and their teachers who were randomly assigned to different size classes from kindergarten through third grade and found that performance on standardized tests increases by 4 percentile points the first year students attend small classes; the test score advantage of students in small classes expands by about one percentile point per year in subsequent years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inequality of opportunity in comparative perspective : Recent research on educational attainment and social mobility

TL;DR: This article reviewed research published since 1990 into educational stratification and social (occupational or class) mobility, focusing on the importance of parental socioeconomic circumstances, and with particular emphasis on comparative studies, concluding that the 1990s witnessed a resurgence of micro-level models, mostly of a rational choice type, that signals an increased interest in moving beyond description in strat...
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Using Maimonides' Rule to Estimate the Effect of Class Size on Student Achievement

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of class size on student achievement has been investigated in the context of test scores of Israeli 4th and 5th graders and 3rd graders.
References
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Posted Content

The Economics of Schooling: Production and Efficiency in Public Schools.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors point out that public and professional interest in education is likely to be short-lived, doomed to dissipate as frustration over the inability of policy to improve school practice sets in.
Posted Content

Experimental Estimates of Education Production Functions

TL;DR: This paper analyzed data on 11,600 students and their teachers who were randomly assigned to different size classes from kindergarten through third grade and found that performance on standardized tests increases by 4 percentile points the first year students attend small classes; the test score advantage of students in small classes expands by about one percentile point per year in subsequent years.
ReportDOI

Using Maimonides' Rule to Estimate the Effect of Class Size on Scholastic Achievement

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used Maimonides' rule of 40 to construct instrumental variables estimates of effects of class size on test scores and found that reducing class size induces a signiecant and substantial increase in test scores for fourth and efth graders, although not for third graders.
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The Growing Importance of Cognitive Skills in Wage Determination

TL;DR: This paper used data from two longitudinal surveys of American high school seniors and found that cognitive skills had a larger impact on wages for 24-year-old men and women in 1986 than in 1978.
Posted Content

Using Maimonides' Rule to Estimate the Effect of Class Size on Student Achievement

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of class size on student achievement has been investigated in the context of test scores of Israeli 4th and 5th graders and 3rd graders.
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