Evaluating The Impact of Mexico's Quality Schools Program [electronic resource] : The Pitfalls of Using Nonexperimental Data / Skoufias, Emmanuel

By: Skoufias, EmmanuelContributor(s): Shapiro, Joseph | Skoufias, EmmanuelMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Washington, D.C., The World Bank, 2006Description: 1 online resource (48 p.)Subject(s): Curriculum | Disability | Education | Education for All | Effective Schools and Teachers | Faculty | Gender | Gender and Education | Grants | Learning | Ministry of Education | Papers | Primary Education | Quality of Instruction | Research | School | School Quality | Schools | Science | Secondary Education | Social Protections and Labor | Student | Student Learning | Students | Teacher | Teacher Training | Teachers | Teaching | Tertiary Education | TextbooksAdditional physical formats: Skoufias, Emmanuel.: Evaluating The Impact of Mexico's Quality Schools Program.Online resources: Click here to access online Abstract: The authors evaluate whether increasing school resources and decentralizing management decisions at the school level improves learning in a developing country. Mexico's Quality Schools Program (PEC), following many other countries and U.S. states, offers US
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The authors evaluate whether increasing school resources and decentralizing management decisions at the school level improves learning in a developing country. Mexico's Quality Schools Program (PEC), following many other countries and U.S. states, offers US 5,000 grants for public schools to implement five-year improvement plans that the school's staff and community design. Using a three-year panel of 74,700 schools, the authors estimate the impact of the PEC on dropout, repetition, and failure using two common nonexperimental methods-regression analysis and propensity score matching. The methods provide similar but nonidentical results. The preferred estimator, difference-in-differences with matching, reveals that participation in the PEC decreases dropout by 0.24 percentage points, failure by 0.24 percentage points, and repetition by 0.31 percentage points-an economically small but statistically significant impact. The PEC lacks measurable impact on outcomes in indigenous schools. The results suggest that a combination of increased resources and local management can produce small improvements in school outcomes, though perhaps not in the most troubled school systems.

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