Author:
Arcidiacono Peter,Aucejo Esteban M,Spenner Ken
Abstract
Abstract
Abstract
At the private university we analyze, the gap between white and black grade point averages falls by half between the students' freshmen and senior year. This outcome could suggest that affirmative action policies are playing a key role to reduce racial differences. However, this convergence masks two effects. First, the variance of grades given falls across time. Hence, shrinkage in the level of the gap may not imply shrinkage in the class rank gap. Second, grading standards differ across courses in different majors. We show that controlling for these two features virtually eliminates any convergence of black/white grades. In fact, black/white gpa convergence is symptomatic of dramatic shifts by blacks from initial interest in the natural sciences, engineering, and economics to majors in the humanities and social sciences. We show that natural science, engineering, and economics courses are more difficult, associated with higher study times, and have harsher grading standards; all of which translate into students with weaker academic backgrounds being less likely to choose these majors. Indeed, we show that accounting for academic background can fully account for average differences in switching behavior between blacks and whites.
Subject
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Economics and Econometrics,Industrial relations
Reference28 articles.
1. Amemiya T: Tobit models: A survey. Journal of Econometrics 1984,24(1984):3–61. North-Holland
2. Arcidiacono P, Foster G, Goodpaster N, Kinsler J: Estimating spillovers using panel data, with an application to the classroom. Quantitative Economics 2012.,3(3):
3. Arcidiacono P, Khan S, Vigdor J: Representation versus assimilation: How do preferences in college admissions affect social interactions? Journal of Public Economics 2011,95(1–2):1–15.
4. Aucejo E: Explaining Cross-Racial Differences in the Educational Gender Gap. Working Paper Duke University; 2011.
5. Bobcock P: Real costs of nominal grade inflation? New evidence from student course evaluations. Economic Inquiry 2010,48(4):983–996. 10.1111/j.1465-7295.2009.00245.x
Cited by
70 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献