Economics of Education Review | 2019

Away from home, better at school. The case of a British boarding school

 
 
 

Abstract


In this paper we study whether substituting family inputs with school resources in an academically oriented environment has an impact on achievement in high-stakes national examinations. We use administrative data for England to estimate the effect of attending a selective boarding school that admits an unusually high share of pupils with low socio-economic status on attainment at the end of compulsory education. By using propensity score matching we obtain comparable control groups in selective non-boarding schools. Our main finding is that the probability of being in the top decile of achievement in the exams increases by about 18 percentage points compared to 59% for controls.

Volume 73
Pages 101911
DOI 10.1016/J.ECONEDUREV.2019.101911
Language English
Journal Economics of Education Review

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