The Effects of Demographic Mismatch in an Elite Professional School Setting
Author(s) -
Chris Birdsall,
Seth Gershenson,
Raymond Zuniga
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
education finance and policy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.413
H-Index - 25
eISSN - 1557-3079
pISSN - 1557-3060
DOI - 10.1162/edfp_a_00280
Subject(s) - race (biology) , salient , elite , psychology , percentage point , point (geometry) , mathematics education , demographic economics , medical education , political science , sociology , medicine , statistics , economics , mathematics , gender studies , geometry , politics , law
Ten years of administrative data from a diverse, private, top-100 law school are used to examine the ways in which female and nonwhite students benefit from exposure to demographically similar faculty in first-year, required law courses. Arguably, causal impacts of exposure to same-sex and same-race instructors on course-specific outcomes such as course grades are identified by leveraging quasi-random classroom assignments and a two-way (student and classroom) fixed effects strategy. Having an other-sex instructor reduces the likelihood of receiving a good grade (A or A–) by 1 percentage point (3 percent) and having an other-race instructor reduces the likelihood of receiving a good grade by 3 percentage points (10 percent). The effects of student–instructor demographic mismatch are particularly salient for nonwhite and female students. These results provide novel evidence of the pervasiveness of demographic-match effects and of the graduate school education production function.
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