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Information on IES-Funded Research
Grant Closed

Assessing the Effectiveness of the Small High School Initiative

NCER
Program: Education Research Grants
Program topic(s): Improving Education Systems
Award amount: $336,664
Principal investigator: Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach
Awardee:
University of Chicago
Year: 2006
Award period: 3 years (07/01/2006 - 06/30/2009)
Project type:
Exploration
Award number: R305R060062

Purpose

In this project, the researchers proposed to use a longitudinal data set to assess the impact of school size on student achievement. Previous studies found that small schools were associated in some settings had improved student outcomes, especially among disadvantaged youth. Although this prior research attempted to isolate the impact of smaller schools, they could not completely disentangle the impact of small schools from other confounding factors correlated with school size such as community factors, Catholic school effects, and smaller classes. The researchers in this study hoped to determine if the relationship between school size and achievement documented in earlier studies was the result of the small schools or because of other confounding factors.

Project Activities

The researchers proposed to use a longitudinal data set from all public high schools in a large urban center in Illinois to assess the impact of student achievement on the recent introduction of 16 small schools since 2001. They aimed to investigate impacts on disadvantaged groups, such as particular racial and ethnic groups, special education students, and students previously enrolled in failing schools.

Structured Abstract

Setting

The schools are located in Illinois.

Sample

Participants will be all students attending 16 small public high schools opened since 2001 and all regular public schools in this large urban center. Almost half the students in this urban area are African American, with another 38 percent Hispanic (any race), 3 percent Asian, and the remainder European American. Most students are disadvantaged, with 85 percent coming from low-income families, and dropout rates are high.

Intervention

The researchers will use a longitudinal data set to assess the impact of school size on student achievement following the recent introduction of 16 small schools into this large urban area since 2001. They will separately investigate impacts on disadvantaged groups, such as particular racial and ethnic groups, special education students, and students previously enrolled in failing schools.

Research design and methods

The researchers will extensively document what types of students select into these small schools versus the regular schools. Then they will use propensity score matching and an instrumental variables approach, two approaches that have been used to isolate causality in the absence of randomized trials, in order to document the impact on student achievement of small schools in this urban center.

Control condition

Students in the control condition will attend regular public schools.

Key measures

The researchers will investigate student outcomes, including performance on the ACT exam and other standardized tests, performance on district-wide tests in math and English, dropout status, course credits attained, and absences. They will also collect self-reported information on student disciplinary actions and attitudes toward school.

Data analytic strategy

The researchers will use propensity score matching and an instrumental variables approach to attempt to isolate which factors are related to achievement scores of students' attending smaller high schools.

People and institutions involved

IES program contact(s)

Katina Stapleton

Education Research Analyst
NCER

Products and publications

ERIC Citations: Find available citations in ERIC for this award here.

Select Publications:

Journal articles

Barrow, L., Schanzenbach, D.W., and Claessens, A. (2015). The Impact of Chicago's Small High School Initiative. Journal of Urban Economics, 87: 100-113.

Clark, D., and See, E. (2011). The Impact of Tougher Education Standards: Evidence From Florida. Economics of Education Review, 30 (6): 1123-1135.

** This project was submitted to and funded under Middle and High School Reform in FY 2006.

Related projects

Follow-Up to the Study of the Efficacy of North Carolina's Early College High School Model

R305A110085

Impact of Early College High School (ECHS) Model on Postsecondary Performance and Completion

R305A140361

Early College High Schools at Scale: Probing Impacts and Generalizability with a Quasi-Experiment Benchmarked Against an RCT

R305A150477

The Evaluation of Career and College Promise

R305H190036

Questions about this project?

To answer additional questions about this project or provide feedback, please contact the program officer.

 

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Data and AssessmentsPolicies and Standards

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Questions about this project?

To answer additional questions about this project or provide feedback, please contact the program officer.

 

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