Seminario de Microeconomía Aplicada - The Effects of Teacher Quality on Adult Criminal Justice Contact

El seminario de Microeconomía Aplicada del Banco de la República es un espacio para discutir trabajos en progreso en las diferentes áreas de la microeconomía aplicada como economía laboral, organización industrial, economía de la salud, economía agrícola, economía de la educación, desarrollo económico, crimen, economía pública, medio ambiente, economía regional y urbana, entre otras.

Yotam Shem-Tov: is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of California, Los Angeles. Yotam holds a Ph.D. in economics from UC Berkeley. Yotam studies topics in labor economics, criminal justice and crime, and applied econometrics.

Resumen del documento: This paper estimates teachers’ impacts on their students’ future criminal justice contact (CJC). Using a unique data set linking the universe of North Carolina public school data to administrative arrest records, we find a standard deviation of teacher effects on students’ future arrests of 2.7 percentage points (11% of the sample mean). Teachers’ effects on CJC are orthogonal to their effects on academic achievement, implying assignment to a high test score value-added teacher does not reduce future CJC. However, teachers who reduce suspensions and improve attendance substantially reduce future arrests. Similar patterns emerge when allowing teacher impacts to vary by student sex, race, socio-economic status, and school. The results suggest that the development of non-cognitive skills is central to the returns to education for crime and highlight an important dimension of teachers’ social value missed by test score-based quality metrics. 

 

Tiempo de exposición: 1:30 p. m. a 3:00 p. m.