This paper presents the first analysis in the literature of the effect
of test-based grade retention on adult criminal convictions. The rsearchers use
math and English test cutoffs for promotion to ninth grade in Louisiana
using administrative data on all public K-12 students combined with
administrative data on all criminal convictions in the state. They use the promotion discontinuity as an instrument for
grade retention,.
The researchers find that being retained in eighth grade has
large long-run effects on the likelihood of being convicted of a crime
by age 25 and on the number of criminal convictions by age 25. Effects
are largest for violent crimes: the likelihood of being convicted
increases by 1.05 percentage points, or 58.44%, when students are
retained in eighth grade.
The effects are likely driven by declines in high
school peer quality, lowered non-cognitive skill acquisition, and a
reduction in educational attainment. However, there is little effect on
juvenile crime, which suggests the effects on adult criminal engagement
are driven by worse job market prospects and non-cognitive skills that
stem from lower educational investments by students.
The researchers conclude that test- based promotion cutoffs lead to large
private and social costs in terms of higher levels of long-run criminal
convictions that are important to consider in the development and use of
these policies.
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