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The Long-Term Impacts of Teachers: Teacher Value-Added and Student Outcomes in Adulthood
Author(s) -
Raj Chetty,
John N. Friedman,
Jonah Rockoff
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
nber working paper series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w17699
Subject(s) - earnings , test (biology) , value (mathematics) , psychology , teacher quality , quality (philosophy) , term (time) , sample (material) , student achievement , mathematics education , demographic economics , academic achievement , economics , statistics , accounting , mathematics , operations management , physics , quantum mechanics , paleontology , metric (unit) , philosophy , chemistry , epistemology , chromatography , biology
Are teachers' impacts on students' test scores ("value-added") a good measure of their quality? This question has sparked debate largely because of disagreement about (1) whether value-added (VA) provides unbiased estimates of teachers' impacts on student achievement and (2) whether high-VA teachers improve students' long-term outcomes. We address these two issues by analyzing school district data from grades 3-8 for 2.5 million children linked to tax records on parent characteristics and adult outcomes. We find no evidence of bias in VA estimates using previously unobserved parent characteristics and a quasi-experimental research design based on changes in teaching staff. Students assigned to high-VA teachers are more likely to attend college, attend higher- ranked colleges, earn higher salaries, live in higher SES neighborhoods, and save more for retirement. They are also less likely to have children as teenagers. Teachers have large impacts in all grades from 4 to 8. On average, a one standard deviation improvement in teacher VA in a single grade raises earnings by about 1% at age 28. Replacing a teacher whose VA is in the bottom 5% with an average teacher would increase the present value of students' lifetime income by more than $250,000 for the average class- room in our sample. We conclude that good teachers create substantial economic value and that test score impacts are helpful in identifying such teachers.

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