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