It's Time to Learn: Understanding the Differences in Returns to Instruction Time. CEP Discussion Paper No. 1521

As hours per day are inherently a limited resource, increasing daily instruction time reduces the amount of time pupils can dedicate to other activities outside school. We study how the effect of longer school days on achievement varies across students and schools. We exploit a large-scale reform of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Centre for Economic Performance 2017-12
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description As hours per day are inherently a limited resource, increasing daily instruction time reduces the amount of time pupils can dedicate to other activities outside school. We study how the effect of longer school days on achievement varies across students and schools. We exploit a large-scale reform of school schedules that substantially increased daily instruction time in Chilean primary schools. We show that the average effect of one additional year of exposure to the longer school day on reading and on mathematics test scores at the end of grade 4 masks substantial heterogeneity. Students from disadvantaged backgrounds benefit more from longer schedules, indicating that returns to time spent at school are larger the scarcer the learning opportunities available at home. Added instruction time yields higher gains in charter than in public schools, suggesting that more autonomy on administrative and pedagogical decisions may increase the effectiveness of other school inputs. [This paper was produced as part of the Centre's Education and Skills Programme.]
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subjects Charter Schools
Correlation
Disadvantaged Youth
Educational Change
Educational Environment
Educational History
Elementary School Students
Foreign Countries
Grade 4
Institutional Characteristics
Mathematics Achievement
Mathematics Tests
Public Schools
Reading Achievement
Reading Tests
School Schedules
Scores
Socioeconomic Influences
Standardized Tests
Student Characteristics
Time Factors (Learning)
title It's Time to Learn: Understanding the Differences in Returns to Instruction Time. CEP Discussion Paper No. 1521
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