Autonomous schools, achievement and segregation

Irmert, N., Bietenbeck, J., Mattisson, L. & Weinhardt, F. (2023). Autonomous schools, achievement and segregation. (CEP Discussion Papers CEPDP1968). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
Copy

We study whether autonomous schools, which are publicly funded but can operate more independently than government-run schools, affect student achievement and school segregation across 15 countries over 16 years. Our triple-differences regressions exploit between-grade variation in the share of students attending autonomous schools within a given country and year. While autonomous schools do not affect overall achievement, effects are positive for high-socioeconomic status students and negative for immigrants. Impacts on segregation mirror these findings, with evidence of increased segregation by socioeconomic and immigrant status. Rather than creating "a rising tide that lifts all boats", autonomous schools increase inequality.

picture_as_pdf

subject
Published Version

Download

Export as

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV
Export