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Who is more likely to participate in private tutoring and does it work? Evidence from PISA (2015)

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Abstract

In recent years, private tutoring has become increasingly prevalent in China and has become both a dominant way for students to learn after school and a major component of family educational expenditure. This paper aims to analyze the factors that affect Chinese students’ participation in private tutoring and the effectiveness of private tutoring. […] Empirical results show that individual level factors including student's interest in science, educational expectations, and school-level factors such as school autonomy, science-related learning resources and school size pose a significant influence on the likelihood of participation in private tutoring. Moreover, science-related private tutoring has not significantly improved the overall scientific literacy scores of students. In addition, private tutoring has widened the performance gap among students from different socioeconomic backgrounds, with students from socioeconomically advantaged family experiencing more significant gains from tutoring.

Author
Liao, Xiangyi
Huang, Xiaoting
Year of publication
2018
Pages
0
Series
ECNU Review of Education 1, 3
Country (Geographical area)
Source database
library
Language
Project
Programme for International Student Assessment, PISA