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The Long-Term Impacts of Low-Achieving Childhood Peers: Evidence from Project STAR

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This paper evaluates how sharing a kindergarten classroom with low-achieving repeaters affects the long-term educational performance of regular first-time kindergarten students. Exploiting random assignment of teachers and students to classes in Project STAR, I document three sets of causal impacts: students who are exposed to repeaters (1) score lower on standardized tests at the end of kindergarten, an effect that fades out in later grades; (2) show persistent improvements in non-cognitive skills such as effort and discipline; and (3) are more likely to graduate from high school and to take a college entrance exam around the age of eighteen. I show that the positive spillovers from repeaters on long-term educational attainment are likely driven by the differential accumulation of non-cognitive skills by repeater-exposed students during childhood. The improvements in these skills are in turn a result of behavioral adjustments by teachers, students, or parents to the presence of low-achieving repeaters in the classroom.

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  • Bietenbeck, Jan, 2015. "The Long-Term Impacts of Low-Achieving Childhood Peers: Evidence from Project STAR," Working Papers 2015:35, Lund University, Department of Economics.
  • Handle: RePEc:hhs:lunewp:2015_035
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    Keywords

    peer effects; non-cognitive skills; early childhood; Project STAR.;
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    JEL classification:

    • I21 - Health, Education, and Welfare - - Education - - - Analysis of Education

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