Publication | Closed Access
Soft Commitments, Reminders, and Academic Performance
55
Citations
42
References
2019
Year
Commitment DeviceSoft CommitmentsEducational PsychologyEducationSocial SciencesSoft Commitment DevicePsychologyBehavioral PrincipleUniversity Student RetentionBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceLearning SciencesMotivationEducational TestingOrganizational CommitmentCommitment ModelExperimental PsychologyHigher EducationExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorNonbinding AgreementAchievement MotivationSelf-regulated Learning
We provide first evidence that a soft commitment device enhances progress in education and, more generally, improves the completion of complex tasks—such as passing exams. In our field experiment, students can sign a nonbinding agreement and commit to staying on track for graduation. We find that those who were offered the soft commitment device are more likely to sign up for, take part in, and pass exams. A pure reminder treatment does not change behavior, which suggests that the effects are not driven by increased salience. We also show that procrastinators benefit most from the commitment device. (JEL C93, D12, D91, I23)
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