The Role of Background Factors for Reading Literacy: Straight National Scores in the PISA 2000 Study
19 Pages Posted: 29 Aug 2002
There are 2 versions of this paper
The Role of Background Factors for Reading Literacy: Straight National Scores in the PISA 2000 Study
The Role of Background Factors for Reading Literacy: Straight National Scores in the PISA 2000 Study
Date Written: August 2002
Abstract
Based on the individual-level data of the PISA 2000 study, this note provides a detailed econometric analysis of the way that reading test scores are associated with individual and family background information and with characteristics of the school and class of the 15 to 16 year old respondents to the survey. Based on our quantile regressions, we interpret the national performance scores conditional on these observable characteristics, as the reflection of different education systems. Our findings suggest that US students, particularly those in the lower quantiles, are served relatively unsatisfactorily by their system of education. Moreover, part of the potential for improvement seems to involve measurable aspects which could be altered and monitored easily.
Keywords: Reading Literacy, School Resources, Quantile Regression
JEL Classification: I21, I28
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
What Accounts for International Differences in Student Performance? A Re-Examination Using PISA Data
By Ludger Woessmann and Thomas Fuchs
-
Who's to Blame? The Determinants of German Students' Achievement in the PISA 2000 Study
-
The Role of Background Factors for Reading Literacy: Straight National Scores in the PISA 2000 Study
-
By Philipp Bauer and Regina T. Riphahn
-
Economic and Social Perspectives of Immigrant Children in Germany
By Joachim R. Frick and Gert G. Wagner
-
School Quality, Educational Attainment and Aggregation Bias
By Michael Fertig and Robert E. Wright
-
The Effect Heterogeneity of Central Exams: Evidence from Timss, Timss-Repeat and PISA