The Impact of Upper Secondary School Flexibility on Sorting and Educational Outcomes
Abstract
This paper estimates the causal impact of an upper secondary curriculum reform in Sweden that increased students' course-taking flexibility in year 2000. In the most popular upper secondary program, it led to a significant decrease in mandatory mathematics requirements. Using administrative Swedish data, we estimate the causal impact of the reform on tertiary education outcomes and expected earnings using a differences-in-discontinuity identification strategy. The method compares students born immediately before and after the cutoff date. The inclusion of students born in neighboring non-reform cutoff years enables us to disentangle the school starting age effect from the unconfounded effect of the reform. We find no negative effects of the reduced mathematics requirements. Rather, we find a positive effect of the reform on students' probability of enrolling in, and earning a degree from, tertiary education. Our heterogeneity analysis suggests that relatively disadvantaged students were not negatively affected by the reform.
Other description
JEL: I21,I23,I26,I28
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2019-05Author
Berggren, Andrea
Jeppsson, Louise
Keywords
Educational Economics
Upper secondary school curriculum
Course selection
Tertiary education
Returns to education
Reform evaluation
Human Capital
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
764
Language
eng