How do transparent admission standards increase the application to the college-bound upper-secondary school track

How do transparent admission standards increase the application to the college-bound upper-secondary school track

12/01. 11.30am-1pm. Seminar co-organized with the CRIS
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LIEPP's Educational Policies research group and the Centre for Research on Social Inequalities are pleased to convene the seminar: 

How do transparent admission standards increase the application to the college-bound upper-secondary school track: A series of randomized field experiments

Friday January 12th. 11.30am-1pm.

Location : Sciences Po, Room K011, 1 place Saint Thomas d'Aquin, 75007, Paris 

Mandatory registration

Speaker: 

  • Tamás Keller ( HU-REN - Institute of Economics at the Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Budapest)

Abstract: 

Students require accurate information to navigate the education system. In response to this need, various information campaigns have emerged in different fields of social science, with the goal of providing students with essential details. A growing body of empirical literature suggests that schools’ admission standards may discourage students from applying due to the associated risk of non-admission, which students tend to avoid.

This study makes two key contributions to the literature on educational decision-making.

Firstly, we examine how the perception of schools’ admission standards influences students’ perceived admission chances, potentially dissuading them from applying.

Secondly, we conduct a series of pair-matched, cluster-randomized field experiments, revealing schools’ actual admission standards to qualified students to encourage their application.

Our findings indicate that our light-touch treatment led to a small and statistically insignificant main effect.

The paper further delves into heterogeneity in the treatment effect and speculates on reasons why pure information campaigns may not be fully effective.

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