The effect of measured school inputs on academic achievement: Evidence from the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s birth cohorts

Author/s: 

Susanna Loeb

,

John Bound

Year of Publication: 
1996
Publication: 
Review of Economics and Statistics
Volume/Issue: 
78(4)
Pages: 
653-664

The study presented here uses data from the NORC General Social Surveys to explore the effects of measurable school characteristics on student achievement. What separates this study from many others is the use of aggregate data on older cohorts, usually associated with research on the influence of school inputs on earnings. We fmd substantively large effects, similar in size to those found in many earnings-focused studies. Our results point to the impor- tance of aggregation in modeling the relationship between school inputs and student outcomes, bringing into question causal interpretations of the results of studies using aggregate data to assess school input effects.

APA Citation

Loeb, S., & Bound, J. (1996). The effect of measured school inputs on academic achievement: Evidence from the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s birth cohorts. Review of Economics and Statistics, 78(4), 653-664.