Affiliation:
1. University of California, Davis
2. University of Michigan
3. Stanford University
Abstract
This article uses fixed effects models to estimate differences in contemporaneous and downstream academic outcomes for students who take courses virtually and face-to-face—both for initial attempts and for credit recovery. We find that while contemporaneous outcomes are positive for virtual students in both settings, downstream outcomes vary by attempt type. For first-time course takers, virtual course taking is associated with decreases in the likelihood of taking and passing follow-on courses and in graduation readiness (based on a proxy measure). For credit recovery students, virtual course taking is associated with an increased likelihood of taking and passing follow-on courses and being in line for graduation. Supplemental analyses suggest that selection on unobservables would have to be substantial to render these results null.
Funder
Spencer Foundation
Walton Family Foundation
institute of education sciences
Subject
Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education
Cited by
56 articles.
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