Peer effects and educational achievement: evidence of causal effects using age at school entry as exogenous variation for Peer quality
This paper evaluates the diffusion of peer effects on academic achievement of 4th grade students in the Brazilian public school system. Using data from Prova Brasil 2013, the identification strategy builds on the use of an IV approach, in which the instruments for peers’ performance are the proporti...
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doaj-6ff32fb3b6ab4f34836d61975306da482021-08-02T16:52:24ZengElsevierEconomiA1517-75802020-01-012111837Peer effects and educational achievement: evidence of causal effects using age at school entry as exogenous variation for Peer qualityIsabel Pessoa de Arruda Raposo0Michela Barreto Camboim Gonçalves1Corresponding author.; Researcher at the Fundação Joaquim Nabuco – Ministry of Education, Rua Dois Irmãos, 92 - Ed. Anexo Anízio Teixeira - Apipucos – Recife/PE CEP: 52071-440, BrazilResearcher at the Fundação Joaquim Nabuco – Ministry of Education, Rua Dois Irmãos, 92 - Ed. Anexo Anízio Teixeira - Apipucos – Recife/PE CEP: 52071-440, BrazilThis paper evaluates the diffusion of peer effects on academic achievement of 4th grade students in the Brazilian public school system. Using data from Prova Brasil 2013, the identification strategy builds on the use of an IV approach, in which the instruments for peers’ performance are the proportions of classmates born in the second semester of the year (and alternatively, in each quarter). The idea behind the instruments is that compulsory school enrolment laws generate variation in the child’s age at school entry, which, in turn, make the date of birth within the year an important determinant of educational achievement and, at the same time, plausibly exogenous to the quality of the student’s peers. The results demonstrate that classrooms with higher proportions of peers born in the 2nd semester (started school at a relatively older age) tend to perform better, on average, than those that concentrate children born in the 1st semester, even after the inclusion of a wide range of control variables. For the math and Portuguese language evaluations, a one standard deviation increase in the classmates’ test scores improves individual achievement by 30% of a SD.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1517758020300345I20I21C13 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Isabel Pessoa de Arruda Raposo Michela Barreto Camboim Gonçalves |
spellingShingle |
Isabel Pessoa de Arruda Raposo Michela Barreto Camboim Gonçalves Peer effects and educational achievement: evidence of causal effects using age at school entry as exogenous variation for Peer quality EconomiA I20 I21 C13 |
author_facet |
Isabel Pessoa de Arruda Raposo Michela Barreto Camboim Gonçalves |
author_sort |
Isabel Pessoa de Arruda Raposo |
title |
Peer effects and educational achievement: evidence of causal effects using age at school entry as exogenous variation for Peer quality |
title_short |
Peer effects and educational achievement: evidence of causal effects using age at school entry as exogenous variation for Peer quality |
title_full |
Peer effects and educational achievement: evidence of causal effects using age at school entry as exogenous variation for Peer quality |
title_fullStr |
Peer effects and educational achievement: evidence of causal effects using age at school entry as exogenous variation for Peer quality |
title_full_unstemmed |
Peer effects and educational achievement: evidence of causal effects using age at school entry as exogenous variation for Peer quality |
title_sort |
peer effects and educational achievement: evidence of causal effects using age at school entry as exogenous variation for peer quality |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
EconomiA |
issn |
1517-7580 |
publishDate |
2020-01-01 |
description |
This paper evaluates the diffusion of peer effects on academic achievement of 4th grade students in the Brazilian public school system. Using data from Prova Brasil 2013, the identification strategy builds on the use of an IV approach, in which the instruments for peers’ performance are the proportions of classmates born in the second semester of the year (and alternatively, in each quarter). The idea behind the instruments is that compulsory school enrolment laws generate variation in the child’s age at school entry, which, in turn, make the date of birth within the year an important determinant of educational achievement and, at the same time, plausibly exogenous to the quality of the student’s peers. The results demonstrate that classrooms with higher proportions of peers born in the 2nd semester (started school at a relatively older age) tend to perform better, on average, than those that concentrate children born in the 1st semester, even after the inclusion of a wide range of control variables. For the math and Portuguese language evaluations, a one standard deviation increase in the classmates’ test scores improves individual achievement by 30% of a SD. |
topic |
I20 I21 C13 |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1517758020300345 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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