The Effect of Occupational Licensing Stringency on the Teacher Quality Distribution
Author(s) -
Bradley Larsen,
Ziao Ju,
Adam Kapor,
Chuan Yu
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nber working paper series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w28158
Subject(s) - coursework , occupational licensing , quality (philosophy) , distribution (mathematics) , poverty , mathematics education , alternative teacher certification , demographic economics , business , psychology , medical education , economics , economic growth , mathematics , teacher education , medicine , microeconomics , physics , mathematical analysis , quantum mechanics
Concerned about the low academic ability of public school teachers, in the 1990s and 2000s, some states increased licensing stringency to weed out low-quality candidates, while others decreased restrictions to attract high-quality candidates. We offer a theoretical model justifying both reactions. Using data from 1991–2007 on licensing requirements and teacher quality—as measured by the selectivity of teachers’ undergraduate institutions—we find that stricter licensing requirements, especially those emphasizing academic coursework, increase the left tail of the quality distribution for secondary school teachers without significantly decreasing quality for high-minority or high-poverty districts.
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