Teacher Shocks and Student Learning: Evidence from Zambia.

We examine the effect of shocks to teacher inputs on child performance in school. We start with a household optimization framework where parents spend optimally in response to teacher and other school inputs. This helps to isolate the impact of teachers from other inputs. As a proxy measure for thes...

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Main Authors: Das, J, Dercon, S, Habyarimana, J, Krishnan, P
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: Centre for the Study of African Economies 2004
Subjects:
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author Das, J
Dercon, S
Habyarimana, J
Krishnan, P
author_facet Das, J
Dercon, S
Habyarimana, J
Krishnan, P
author_sort Das, J
collection OXFORD
description We examine the effect of shocks to teacher inputs on child performance in school. We start with a household optimization framework where parents spend optimally in response to teacher and other school inputs. This helps to isolate the impact of teachers from other inputs. As a proxy measure for these shocks, we use teacher absenteeism during a 30 day period. Shocks to teacher inputs have a significant impact on learning gains. In a sample of students who remained with the same teacher over the two years for which we have test score data, shocks associated with a typical episode of absence lead to a decline of 20-30 percent in learning gains during the year. The size and precision of these estimates is identical for both Mathematics and English. We document that health problems account for over 60 percent of time spent in absence–this is not surprising in a country deeply affected by the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Tackling health problems of teachers and/or reducing the impact of absences by increasing the public provision of teachers (allowing for substitute teachers) is likely to have positive impacts on learning.
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spelling oxford-uuid:97389375-7c28-4e8d-b0bd-b1bdaa2552552022-03-26T23:57:59ZTeacher Shocks and Student Learning: Evidence from Zambia.Working paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:97389375-7c28-4e8d-b0bd-b1bdaa255255Development economicsJEL: I28JEL: 016JEL: H31AfricaEducationEnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrintsCentre for the Study of African Economies2004Das, JDercon, SHabyarimana, JKrishnan, PWe examine the effect of shocks to teacher inputs on child performance in school. We start with a household optimization framework where parents spend optimally in response to teacher and other school inputs. This helps to isolate the impact of teachers from other inputs. As a proxy measure for these shocks, we use teacher absenteeism during a 30 day period. Shocks to teacher inputs have a significant impact on learning gains. In a sample of students who remained with the same teacher over the two years for which we have test score data, shocks associated with a typical episode of absence lead to a decline of 20-30 percent in learning gains during the year. The size and precision of these estimates is identical for both Mathematics and English. We document that health problems account for over 60 percent of time spent in absence–this is not surprising in a country deeply affected by the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Tackling health problems of teachers and/or reducing the impact of absences by increasing the public provision of teachers (allowing for substitute teachers) is likely to have positive impacts on learning.
spellingShingle Development economics
JEL: I28
JEL: 016
JEL: H31
Africa
Education
Das, J
Dercon, S
Habyarimana, J
Krishnan, P
Teacher Shocks and Student Learning: Evidence from Zambia.
title Teacher Shocks and Student Learning: Evidence from Zambia.
title_full Teacher Shocks and Student Learning: Evidence from Zambia.
title_fullStr Teacher Shocks and Student Learning: Evidence from Zambia.
title_full_unstemmed Teacher Shocks and Student Learning: Evidence from Zambia.
title_short Teacher Shocks and Student Learning: Evidence from Zambia.
title_sort teacher shocks and student learning evidence from zambia
topic Development economics
JEL: I28
JEL: 016
JEL: H31
Africa
Education
work_keys_str_mv AT dasj teachershocksandstudentlearningevidencefromzambia
AT dercons teachershocksandstudentlearningevidencefromzambia
AT habyarimanaj teachershocksandstudentlearningevidencefromzambia
AT krishnanp teachershocksandstudentlearningevidencefromzambia