砖块和砂浆vs.电脑和调制解调器:K-12虚拟学校招生的影响

Carycruz Bueno
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引用次数: 19

摘要

2019冠状病毒病大流行使虚拟学校成为政策关注的焦点,全球数百万儿童转向虚拟学校,希望“减缓传播”。鉴于在线教育的紧急转变以及过去十年虚拟教育需求的大幅增长,探索虚拟教育对学生成绩的影响势在必行。本文估计了全日制虚拟学校出勤对学生成绩的因果影响,并对学校选择、在线教育和教育政策具有重要意义。尽管过去十年对K-12虚拟学校的需求不断增加,但人们对全日制虚拟学校对学生认知和行为结果的影响知之甚少。关于在线教育对学生成绩影响的现有证据好坏参半。我使用了一个纵向数据集,由2007年至2016年格鲁吉亚所有公立学校学生和教师的个人层面信息组成,以调查参加虚拟学校如何影响学生的成绩。我实施了各种计量经济学规范来解释全日制虚拟学校潜在的自我选择问题。我发现,参加虚拟学校导致小学生和中学生的英语语言艺术、数学、科学和社会研究成绩降低了0.1到0.4个标准差。我还发现,上过虚拟学校的学生高中毕业的概率会降低10%。这是早期的证据,表明全日制虚拟学校作为一种学校选择可能对学生的学习和未来的经济机会有害,而且对纳税人的钱的使用也不理想。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bricks and Mortar vs. Computers and Modems: The Impacts of Enrollment in K-12 Virtual Schools
The COVID-19 pandemic has put virtual schooling at the forefront of policy concerns, as millions of children worldwide shift to virtual schooling with hopes of "slowing the spread''. Given the emergency shift to online education coupled with the large increase in demand for virtual education over the last decade it is imperative to explore the impacts of virtual education on student outcomes. This paper estimates the causal effect of full-time virtual school attendance on student outcomes with important implications for school choice, online education, and education policy. Despite the increasing demand for K-12 virtual schools over the past decade little is known about the impact of full-time virtual schools on students’ cognitive and behavioral outcomes. The existing evidence on the impact of online education on students’ outcomes is mixed. I use a longitudinal data set composed of individual-level information on all public-school students and teachers throughout Georgia from 2007 to 2016 to investigate how attending virtual schools influences student outcomes. I implement a variety of econometric specifications to account for the issue of potential self-selection into full-time virtual schools. I find that attending a virtual school leads to a reduction of 0.1 to 0.4 standard deviations in English Language Arts, Mathematics, Science, and Social Studies achievement test scores for students in elementary and middle school. I also find that ever attending a virtual school is associated with a 10-percentage point reduction in the probability of ever graduating from high school. This is early evidence that full-time virtual schools as a type of school choice could be harmful to students' learning and future economic opportunities, as well as a sub-optimal use of taxpayer money.
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