Private Beats Public: A Flexible Value-Added Model with Tanzanian School Switchers

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Private Beats Public : A Flexible Value-Added Model with Tanzanian School Switchers. / Brandt, Kasper.

2018.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Brandt, K 2018 'Private Beats Public: A Flexible Value-Added Model with Tanzanian School Switchers'. <https://www.wider.unu.edu/sites/default/files/Publications/Working-paper/PDF/wp2018-81_0.pdf>

APA

Brandt, K. (2018). Private Beats Public: A Flexible Value-Added Model with Tanzanian School Switchers. UNU WIDER Working Paper Series Nr. 81/2018 https://www.wider.unu.edu/sites/default/files/Publications/Working-paper/PDF/wp2018-81_0.pdf

Vancouver

Brandt K. Private Beats Public: A Flexible Value-Added Model with Tanzanian School Switchers. 2018.

Author

Brandt, Kasper. / Private Beats Public : A Flexible Value-Added Model with Tanzanian School Switchers. 2018. (UNU WIDER Working Paper Series; Nr. 81/2018).

Bibtex

@techreport{4767264cf0994845a310f75fb57e3cab,
title = "Private Beats Public: A Flexible Value-Added Model with Tanzanian School Switchers",
abstract = "This paper estimates a private school learning premium in Tanzania by implementing a flexible value-added model with unique administrative data on exam scores. The dataset covers 635,000 secondary school students with information on both their primary and lower secondary school exam records, allowing three out of four assumptions imposed in standard value-added models to be relaxed.The preferred coefficient estimate suggests private secondary schools, on average, increase student exam scores at national exams by 0.45 standard deviations after two years of secondary schooling. Standard value-added models are found to bias the learning premium upward.An instrumental variable model confirms a positive causal learning premium. Subjectspecific learning premiums for Kiswahili, English, and mathematics are 0.28, 0.39, and 0.50 standard deviations, respectively.",
author = "Kasper Brandt",
year = "2018",
language = "English",
series = "UNU WIDER Working Paper Series",
number = "81/2018",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Private Beats Public

T2 - A Flexible Value-Added Model with Tanzanian School Switchers

AU - Brandt, Kasper

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - This paper estimates a private school learning premium in Tanzania by implementing a flexible value-added model with unique administrative data on exam scores. The dataset covers 635,000 secondary school students with information on both their primary and lower secondary school exam records, allowing three out of four assumptions imposed in standard value-added models to be relaxed.The preferred coefficient estimate suggests private secondary schools, on average, increase student exam scores at national exams by 0.45 standard deviations after two years of secondary schooling. Standard value-added models are found to bias the learning premium upward.An instrumental variable model confirms a positive causal learning premium. Subjectspecific learning premiums for Kiswahili, English, and mathematics are 0.28, 0.39, and 0.50 standard deviations, respectively.

AB - This paper estimates a private school learning premium in Tanzania by implementing a flexible value-added model with unique administrative data on exam scores. The dataset covers 635,000 secondary school students with information on both their primary and lower secondary school exam records, allowing three out of four assumptions imposed in standard value-added models to be relaxed.The preferred coefficient estimate suggests private secondary schools, on average, increase student exam scores at national exams by 0.45 standard deviations after two years of secondary schooling. Standard value-added models are found to bias the learning premium upward.An instrumental variable model confirms a positive causal learning premium. Subjectspecific learning premiums for Kiswahili, English, and mathematics are 0.28, 0.39, and 0.50 standard deviations, respectively.

M3 - Working paper

T3 - UNU WIDER Working Paper Series

BT - Private Beats Public

ER -

ID: 202298023