1 / 11

Paying to Learn: The Effect of Financial Incentives on Elementary School Test Scores

Paying to Learn: The Effect of Financial Incentives on Elementary School Test Scores. Eric P. Bettinger. Background. Short-run stimuli In 1820, New York City introduced a system of financial rewards for student performance Ex: (Pizza Parties, Visits to museums, etc.)

luisa
Download Presentation

Paying to Learn: The Effect of Financial Incentives on Elementary School Test Scores

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Paying to Learn: The Effect of Financial Incentives on Elementary School Test Scores Eric P. Bettinger

  2. Background • Short-run stimuli • In 1820, New York City introduced a system of financial rewards for student performance • Ex: (Pizza Parties, Visits to museums, etc.) • Israel, 1999: Provided cash payments to high school students who took high school completion exams. Paid for participation and performance.

  3. Examples • Educational Maintenance Allowance (EMA) • College students in United Kingdom • Thirty pounds a week • Kenya implemented a program focused on female students • Large, positive impacts • Kremer, Miguel and Thorton (2008)

  4. Coshocton Incentive Program • Eastern Ohio • High unemployment, low manufacturing and agriculture wages • Average income: $24,000 • 94% White • 55% of students qualify for free/reduced lunch. • Poor performance lead to the state of Ohio threatening to intercede and take-over the schools

  5. Methodology • Panel data consisting of randomly chosen students from 1st-6th grade starting in 2002-2003 and going through 2006-2007 • Chosen through lottery • Children paid in “Children Bucks” • Only redeemable for children items • Accepted at every store in Coshocton • Ensured the rewards were being spent on the children

  6. Methodology cont. • Simple Regression model • Yijkt=a+b*Treatijkt+gradek+schoolj+timet+eijkt • i=student • j=school • k=grade • t=time • Grade, school and time are fixed control effects • Augmented model includes student covariates: age, gender, race, free/reduced lunch status, and previous year test scores.

  7. Results: Math

  8. Results: Reading

  9. Intrinsic v Extrinsic Motivation • Potential impact on intrinsic motivation • Inhibits intrinsic motivation: (Lepper & Greene 1978, Cameron &Pierce 2002, and countless more) • Participation versus Performance (Cameron and Pierce 2002) • Nature of Reward (unexpected versus expected)

  10. Inconclusive Effects • Gender • Spillover • Multi year Treatment and Year After Effects

  11. Conclusion • Results positive and significant in Math • Not significant in reading, social science, or science • Main Problem: No way of telling if the incentives effected students, parents or teachers • $100 Wallpaper • “Show me the money!” • Insignificant year-after effects suggest no long-run effects

More Related