Friendship and Female Education: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Bangladeshi Primary Schools

Author:

Hahn Youjin1,Islam Asadul2,Patacchini Eleonora3,Zenou Yves4

Affiliation:

1. Yonsei University, South Korea

2. Monash University, Australia

3. Cornell University, USA, EIEF, IZA and CEPR

4. Monash University, Australia, and IFN

Abstract

Abstract We randomly assigned 115 primary schools in Bangladesh to one of two settings: children studying in groups with friends and children studying in groups with peers. The groups consisted of four people with similar average cognitive abilities and household characteristics. While the achievement of male students was not affected by the group assignment, low-ability females with friends outperformed low-ability females working with peers by roughly 0.4 standard deviations of the test score distribution. This is not due to the fact that friends tend to be of the same gender or to a higher frequency of interactions among friends.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

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