Effects of School Quality on Student Achievement: Discontinuity Evidence from Kenya

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Effects of School Quality on Student Achievement: Discontinuity Evidence from Kenya
Abstract
The most desirable Kenyan secondary schools are elite government schools that admit the best students from across the country. We exploit the random variation generated by the centralized school admissions process in a regression discontinuity design to obtain causal estimates of the effects of attending one of these elite public schools on student progression and test scores in secondary school. Despite their reputations, we find little evidence of positive impacts on learning outcomes for students who attended these schools, suggesting that their sterling reputations reflect the selection of students rather than their ability to generate value-added test-score gains.
Publication
RePEc: Research Papers in Economics
Pages
-
Date
2014-01-01
Call Number
openalex: W3121896138
Extra
openalex: W3121896138 mag: 3121896138
Citation
Lucas, A., & Mbiti, I. (2014). Effects of School Quality on Student Achievement: Discontinuity Evidence from Kenya. RePEc: Research Papers in Economics. https://econpapers.repec.org/paper/dlwwpaper/14-03..htm