This study provides the first
evidence that cumulative heat exposure inhibits cognitive skill development and that school air conditioning can mitigate
this effect. Student fixed effects models using 10 million PSAT-takers show that hotter school
days in the year prior to the test reduce learning, with extreme heat being particularly damaging
and larger effects for low income and minority students. Weekend and summer heat has little
impact and the effect is not explained by pollution or local economic shocks, suggesting heat
directly reduces the productivity of learning inputs.
New data providing the first measures of
school-level air conditioning penetration across the US suggest such infrastructure almost entirely offsets
these effects. Without air conditioning, each 1° F increase in school year
temperature reduces the amount learned that year by one percent. These estimates imply that the benefits of school
air conditioning likely outweigh the costs in most of the US, particularly given future predicted
climate change.
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