Disruptive school peers and student outcomes

Author: Angrist, Angrist, Bergström, Bertrand, Billings, Black, Browning, Carrell, Cho, Diette, Epple, Figlio, Fletcher, Fredriksson, Gibbons, Goodman, Goodman, Hanushek, Hanushek, Helena Skyt Nielsen, Imberman, Jannie Helene Gr√∏ne Kristoffersen, Lavy, Lavy, Lavy, Marianne Simonsen, Morten Visby Kr√¶gp√∏th, Sacerdote, Snyder, Todd
Publisher: Elsevier BV

ABOUT BOOK

This paper estimates how peers' achievement gains are affected by the presence of potentially disruptive and emotionally sensitive children in the school-cohort. We exploit that some children move between schools and thus generate variation in peer composition in the receiving school-cohort. We identify three groups of potentially disruptive and emotionally sensitive children from detailed Danish register data: children with divorced parents, children with parents convicted of crime, and children with a psychiatric diagnosis. We find that adding potentially disruptive children lowers the academic achievement of peers by about 1.7-2.3 percent of a standard deviation

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