Abstract
The author estimates achievement effects of education public-private partnerships (PPPs) in 17 countries on the 2009 PISA assessment. Enrollment in PPP schools is tied to student wealth and prior academic ability. PPP students outperform their public peers on half of all outcomes. After accounting for selection, the PPP performance advantage remains on one-quarter of outcomes. However, nearly all of these performance differences are accounted for by school-level peer group effects. PPP schools are outperforming their public counterparts not through any advantages in productive efficiency but through sorting of more capable students.
Year of publication
2018
Pages
0
Series
EPAA/AAPE
URL
Linguistic region
Country (Geographical area)
Level of education
Source database
library
Language
Project
Programme for International Student Assessment, PISA