Interpreting School Choice Treatment Effects: Results and Implications from Computational Experiments
Authored by Spiro Maroulis
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.18564/jasss.3002
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Abstract
Providing parents and students a choice to attend schools other than
their assigned neighborhood school has been a leading theme in recent
education reform. To evaluate the effects of such choice-based programs, researchers have taken advantage of the randomization that occurs in
student assignment lotteries put in place to deal with oversubscription
to popular schools and pilot programs. In this study, I used an
agent-based model of the transition to school choice as platform for
examining the sensitivity of school choice treatment effects from
lottery-based studies to differences in student preferences and program
participation rates across hypothetical study populations. I found that
districts with higher participation rates had lower treatment effects, even when there were no differences in the distributions of school
quality and student preferences between districts. This is because
capacity constraints increasingly limited the amount of students who are
able to attend the highest quality schools, causing the magnitude of the
treatment effect to fall. I discuss the implications of this finding for
interpreting the results of lottery-based studies involving choice
schools.
Tags
Performance
Sector
Private
Lotteries