Student Transience in North Carolina: The Effect of School Mobility on Student Outcomes Using Longitudinal Data. Working Paper 22.

Z Xu, J Hannaway, S D'Souza - National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal …, 2009 - ERIC
Z Xu, J Hannaway, S D'Souza
National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research, 2009ERIC
This paper describes the school mobility rates for elementary and middle school students in
North Carolina and attempts to estimate the effect of school mobility on the performance of
different groups of students using student fixed effects models. School mobility is defined as
changing schools at times that are non-promotional (eg, moving from middle to high school).
We used detailed administrative data on North Carolina students and schools from 1997 to
2005 and followed four cohorts of 3rd graders for six years each. School mobility rates were …
This paper describes the school mobility rates for elementary and middle school students in North Carolina and attempts to estimate the effect of school mobility on the performance of different groups of students using student fixed effects models. School mobility is defined as changing schools at times that are non-promotional (e.g., moving from middle to high school). We used detailed administrative data on North Carolina students and schools from 1997 to 2005 and followed four cohorts of 3rd graders for six years each. School mobility rates were highest for minority and disadvantaged students. School mobility rates for Hispanic students declined across successive cohorts, but increased for Black students. Findings on effects were most pronounced in math. School mobility hurt the math performance of Black and Hispanic students, but not the math performance of white students. School mobility improved the reading performance of white and more advantaged students, but had no
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