Publication | Closed Access
The Effects of Charter High Schools on Educational Attainment
98
Citations
15
References
2011
Year
Educational OutcomesEducational AttainmentEducationCharter High SchoolsTest ScoresEducational AdministrationEducational DisadvantageHigh School ChoiceSocial InequalityPublic PolicyEconomicsEducational TestingEducational StatisticsHigher EducationCharter High SchoolSecondary EducationBusinessDemographyEducation PolicyEducation Economics
We analyze the relationship between charter high school attendance and educational attainment in Florida and in Chicago. Controlling for observed student characteristics and test scores, we estimate that among students who attended a charter middle school, those who went on to attend a charter high school were 7–15 percentage points more likely to earn a standard diploma than students who transitioned to a traditional public high school. Similarly, those attending a charter high school were 8–10 percentage points more likely to attend college. We find even larger effects when we treat high school choice as endogenous.
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