Panel Data Models for School Evaluation: The Case of High Schools’ Results in University Entrance Examinations
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Salas Velasco, ManuelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
High school performance Grade inflation Panel data econometrics School evaluation Selectividad
Fecha
2023-02-13Referencia bibliográfica
Salas-Velasco, M. Panel Data Models for School Evaluation: The Case of High Schools’ Results in University Entrance Examinations. Stats 2023, 6, 312–321. [https://doi.org/10.3390/stats6010019]
Resumen
To what extent do high school students’ course grades align with their scores on standardized
college admission tests? People sometimes make the argument that grades are “inflated”,
but many school districts only use outcome-based descriptive methods for school evaluation. In
order to answer that question, this paper proposes econometric models for panel data, which are
less well-known in educational evaluation. In particular, fixed-effects and random-effects models
are proposed for assessing student performance in university entrance examinations. School-level
panel data analysis allows one knowing if results in college admission tests vary more between
high schools than within a high school in different academic years. Another advantage of using
panel data includes the ability to control for school-specific unobserved heterogeneity. For empirical
implementation, official transcript data and university entrance test scores of Spanish secondary
schools are used.