An Eclectic Approach to Estimating the Determinants of Achievement in Jamaican Primary Education |
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Authors: | Glewwe Paul; Grosh Margaret; Jacoby Hanan; Lockheed Marlaine |
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Institution: | Paul Glewwe and Margaret Grosh are with the Policy Research Department at the World Bank, Hanan Jacoby is with the Department of Economics at the University of Rochester, and Marlaine Lockheed is with the Education and Social Policy Department at the World Bank. Financial support was provided by the World Bank Research Committee (RPO 67687). The Jamaican Ministry of Education collaborated extensively in designing the survey instruments, implementing the surveys, and providing access to administrative records. The Planning Institute of Jamaica provided further support, and the Statistical Institute of Jamaica carried out the extremely demanding survey work. The authors would also like to recognize the many contributions of their late Jamaican collaborator, Dr. Derek Gordon. Henri Jeancard and Qinghua Zhao provided computational assistance. |
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Abstract: | This article estimates the determinants of cognitive skillsin Jamaican primary education. We take an eclectic approach,integrating the production function framework favored by economistswith the concerns of educators about pedagogical processes andthose of sociologists regarding school organization and management.At the same time, we correct for selectivity biases inducedby school choice. We use an unusually rich data set, the 1990Jamaican Survey of Living Conditions, which includes not onlyscores on cognitive achievement tests but also detailed informationon each child's household and the primary school he or she attends.We find that all three componentsphysical and pedagogicalinputs, pedagogical practices, and school organization and climateinfluence student achievement. Our policy simulations suggestthat a focus on inputs alone may be misplaced in school systemswith input levels as high as those found in Jamaica; schoolreforms that concentrate on just a few pedagogical practicescould lead to substantial improvements in student achievement. |
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