Walking the line: Does crossing a high stakes exam threshold matter for labour market outcomes?

Oliver Anderson
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 MethodIt does so by comparing those either side of a formerly important threshold in the English education system at the end of compulsory schooling (achieving five general certificate of secondary education A* to C passes) which was commonly regarded as the minimum benchmark for continuing into post-compulsory education.
 ResultsI find that crossing this threshold led to an 6.3-6.7 percentage point increase in the proportion of men and women (respectively) going on to take academic qualifications, with little change in the proportion taking vocational qualifications, leading to a net increase in those staying on after compulsory schooling. Women's daily earnings in 2017-18 (11-13 years after leaving compulsory schooling) were 3.1 percentage points higher for those just crossing the threshold, but men's early labour market outcomes were unchanged.
 ConclusionThe results for men can be explained by low returns to academic qualifications for marginal learners. The findings for women do not disappear after accounting for subsequent education choices, suggesting that crossing the threshold may play a signalling role for employers as well as education institutions.","PeriodicalId":132937,"journal":{"name":"International Journal for Population Data Science","volume":"18 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal for Population Data Science","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.23889/ijpds.v8i2.2187","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

ObjectivesThis paper offers new insight into the link between success in high stakes exams and subsequent education and labour market outcomes. It is the first study to look holistically at the impact of crossing an important high stakes threshold on both academic and vocational education choices and ultimately labour market outcomes. MethodIt does so by comparing those either side of a formerly important threshold in the English education system at the end of compulsory schooling (achieving five general certificate of secondary education A* to C passes) which was commonly regarded as the minimum benchmark for continuing into post-compulsory education. ResultsI find that crossing this threshold led to an 6.3-6.7 percentage point increase in the proportion of men and women (respectively) going on to take academic qualifications, with little change in the proportion taking vocational qualifications, leading to a net increase in those staying on after compulsory schooling. Women's daily earnings in 2017-18 (11-13 years after leaving compulsory schooling) were 3.1 percentage points higher for those just crossing the threshold, but men's early labour market outcomes were unchanged. ConclusionThe results for men can be explained by low returns to academic qualifications for marginal learners. The findings for women do not disappear after accounting for subsequent education choices, suggesting that crossing the threshold may play a signalling role for employers as well as education institutions.
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走钢丝:跨越高风险的考试门槛对劳动力市场的结果有影响吗?
本文为高风险考试的成功与随后的教育和劳动力市场结果之间的联系提供了新的见解。这是第一个全面考察跨越重要的高风险门槛对学术和职业教育选择以及最终劳动力市场结果的影响的研究。方法通过比较义务教育结束时英国教育体系中一个以前很重要的门槛(达到五个普通中等教育证书a *至C的及格),这通常被认为是继续接受义务教育后的最低基准。结果我发现,跨越这一门槛,男性和女性继续获得学历的比例分别增加了6.3-6.7个百分点,而获得职业资格的比例几乎没有变化,导致义务教育后留下来的人数净增加。2017-18年(义务教育结束后11-13年),女性的日收入比刚刚跨入门槛的女性高出3.1个百分点,但男性的早期劳动力市场结果没有变化。结论男性的结果可以用边缘学习者的学历回报低来解释。在考虑了之后的教育选择后,女性的研究结果并没有消失,这表明跨越门槛可能对雇主和教育机构都起到了信号作用。
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