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Improving public sector management at scale? Experimental evidence on school governance in India

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Abstract

We present results from a large-scale experimental evaluation of an ambitious attempt to improve management quality in Indian schools (implemented in 1,774 randomly-selected schools). The intervention featured several global “best practices” including comprehensive assessments, detailed school ratings, and customized school improvement plans. It did not, however, change accountability or incentives. We find that the assessments were near-universally completed, and that the ratings were informative, but the intervention had no impact on either school functioning or student outcomes. Yet, the program was scaled up to cover over 600,000 schools nationally. We find using a matched-pair design that the scaled-up program continued to be ineffective at improving student learning in the state we study. We also conduct detailed qualitative interviews with frontline officials and find that the main impact of the program on the ground was to increase required reporting and paperwork. Our results illustrate how ostensibly well-designed programs, that appear effective based on administrative measures of compliance, may be ineffective in practice. This article has been also published in 2020 within the RISE working paper series.

Author
Muralidharan, Karthik
Singh, Abhijeet
Year of publication
2022
Pages
100
Series
RISE working paper
Country (Geographical area)
Level of education
Source database
library
Language
Project
Research on Improving Systems of Education, RISE