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Marriott Marquis, Rancho Santa Fe 2
Hosted By:
American Economic Association
Achievement Tests II: On the Validity of Comparisons Across SES and Place
Paper Session
Saturday, Jan. 4, 2020 10:15 AM - 12:15 PM (PDT)
- Chair: John B. Klopfer, University of Hong Kong and United States Naval Academy
Testing
Abstract
The significant expansion of varying forms of student testing, while controversial in many countries, has not been generally linked to educational performance. Different testing regimes provide varying information to parents, teachers, and decision makers. We investigate how different types of information relate to student achievement. Our empirical analysis exploits data from over two million students in 59 countries observed across six waves of the international PISA test 2000-2015. Relying on the country panel feature of the data, we investigate how testing reforms relate to country performance on PISA tests over time, taking out country and year fixed effects. Expansion of standardized testing with external comparison, both school-based and student-based, is associated with improvements in student achievement. This effect is stronger in low-performing countries. By contrast, reforms to solely internal testing without external comparison and internal teacher monitoring including inspectorates are not related to changes in student achievement.Discussant(s)
Jong-Wha Lee
,
Korea University
Jeffrey Livingston
,
Bentley University
JEL Classifications
- I2 - Education and Research Institutions
- C1 - Econometric and Statistical Methods and Methodology: General