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Original Articles

The Identification of School Resource Effects

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Pages 105-125 | Published online: 28 Jul 2006
 

Abstract

In the US, the federal government plays a relatively minor role in setting school policy, and the separate states are an important source of policy variation that sets the environment faced by local school districts. The variation in state policies plausibly has a significant impact on students achievement. Little is known about the magnitude of such effects, because data limitations have seldom allowed researchers to specity fully the state policy environment when analyzing school effects. Differences in overall school policies may, however, help to reconcile the contradictory findings about the effectivences of school resource usage that exist. We develop a simple theoreetical model demonstrating that the bias induced by omitting relevent state characetistics is greater in state-level analyses than it is in less aggregate studies. Our exploration of aggregation bias usibng the High School and Beyond data set suggests that aggregation to the state level inflates the coefficients that aggregation is beneficial because it reduce biases from measurement error. These results are completely consistent with the findings of production function studies where positive school resource effects an achievement are much likely to be found when estimation involves state-level data.

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