Options
Taking the easy way out : how the GED testing program induces students to drop out
Date Issued
2008-12-15
Date Available
2010-02-18T17:00:37Z
Abstract
We exploit an exogenous increase in General Educational Development (GED) testing
requirements to determine whether raising the diffculty of the test causes students to finish high school rather than drop out and GED certify. We find that a six point decrease in GED pass rates induces a 1.3 point decline in overall dropout rates. The effect size is also much larger for older students and minorities. Finally, a natural experiment based on the late introduction of the GED in California reveals, that adopting the program increased the dropout rate by 3 points more relative to other states during the mid-1970s.
requirements to determine whether raising the diffculty of the test causes students to finish high school rather than drop out and GED certify. We find that a six point decrease in GED pass rates induces a 1.3 point decline in overall dropout rates. The effect size is also much larger for older students and minorities. Finally, a natural experiment based on the late introduction of the GED in California reveals, that adopting the program increased the dropout rate by 3 points more relative to other states during the mid-1970s.
Sponsorship
American Bar Foundation
National Institutes of Health
Spencer Foundation
Mellon Foundation
JB and MK Pritzker Family Foundation
Buffett Early Childhood Fund
Type of Material
Working Paper
Publisher
University College Dublin. Geary Institute
Series
UCD Geary Institute Discussion Paper Series
WP/29/2008
Classification
C61
Subject – LCSH
General educational development tests
Dropout behavior, Prediction of
Dropouts--United States
Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
Loading...
Name
gearywp200829.pdf
Size
344.54 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
0d3b3125939ee289bc9209abd7d96e3f
Owning collection