Title
School Reform in the 21st Century: A Look at the Effect of Class Size and School Vouchers on the Academic Achievement of Minority Students
Author(s)
Cecilia Elena Rouse Cecilia Rouse (Princeton University and NBER)
Abstract
Many argue schools that serve inner-city and rural children are in crisis. This paper reviews the best available evidence on the effects of class size and school vouchers. Results from the Tennessee STAR experiment suggest smaller class sizes improve achievement, particularly for inner-city and minority children; results from the New York City voucher experiment and the Milwaukee Parental Choice program suggest there may be small achievement gains in mathematics for the African-American and Hispanic children who use vouchers. Although the reason of the achievement gains is unknown, one candidate is the smaller class sizes in the private schools.
Creation Date
2000-06
Section URL ID
IRS
Paper Number
440
URL
https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp013n203z091/1/440.pdf
File Function
Jel
O32
Keyword(s)
class size, school vouchers, student achievement, African-American, Hispanic
Suppress
false
Series
1