School choice has become an increasingly prominent strategy for enhancing academic achievement. To evaluate the impact on participants, we exploit randomized lotteries that determine high school admission in the Chicago Public Schools. Compared to those students who lose lotteries, students who win attend high schools that are better in a number of dimensions, including peer achievement and attainment levels. Nonetheless, we find little evidence that winning a lottery provides any systematic benefit across a wide variety of traditional academic measures. Lottery winners do, however, experience improvements on a subset of nontraditional outcome measures, such as self-reported disciplinary incidents and arrest rates. Copyright The Econometric Society 2006.
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Article provided by Econometric Society in its journal Econometrica.
Volume (Year): 74 (2006) Issue (Month): 5 (09) Pages: 1191-1230 Download reference. The following formats are available: HTML
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