An empirical analysis of teacher spillover effects in secondary school
This paper examines whether educational production in secondary school involves joint production among teachers across subjects. In doing so, it also provides insights into the reliability of value-added modeling. Teacher value-added to reading test scores is estimated for four different teacher types: English, math, science and social-studies. The initial results indicate that reading output is jointly produced by math and English teachers. However, while falsification tests confirm the English-teacher effects, they cast some doubt about whether the math-teacher effects are free from sorting bias. The results offer a mixed review of the value-added methodology, suggesting that it can be useful but should be implemented cautiously.
Year of publication: |
2009
|
---|---|
Authors: | Koedel, Cory |
Published in: |
Economics of Education Review. - Elsevier, ISSN 0272-7757. - Vol. 28.2009, 6, p. 682-692
|
Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Input output analysis Educational economics Resource allocation |
Saved in:
Online Resource
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
The Compositional Effect of Rigorous Teacher Evaluation on Workforce Quality
Cullen, Julie Berry, (2016)
-
NONRESIDENT POSTSECONDARY ENROLLMENT GROWTH AND THE OUTCOMES OF INāSTATE STUDENTS
Li, Diyi, (2020)
-
Test Measurement Error and Inference from Value-Added Models
Koedel, Cory, (2012)
- More ...