Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
354692 Economics of Education Review 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Following an identification strategy that allows us to largely eliminate unobserved student and teacher traits, we examine the effect of homework on math, science, English and history test scores for eighth grade students in the United States. Noting that failure to control for these effects yields selection biases on the estimated effect of homework, we find that math homework has a large and statistically meaningful effect on math test scores throughout our sample. However, additional homework in science, English and history are shown to have little to no impact on their respective test scores.

► Following an identification strategy that allows us to largely eliminate unobserved student and teacher traits, we examine the effect of homework on math, science, English and history test scores for eighth grade students. ► Noting that failure to control for these effects yields selection biases, we find that math homework has a large and statistically meaningful effect on math test scores throughout our sample. ► However, additional homework in science, English and history are shown to have little to no impact on their respective test scores.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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