In France and Spain, children born in the same calendar year start school together, regardless of maturity differences due to their birth month. This paper analyses the educational impact of birth month on the probability of grade retention controlling by other covariates. Using the PISA 2009 database for both countries, wedo identify a great impact on grade retention since students born in the last months of the year are between 70% and 80% more likely to repeat a grade than children born in the first months of the same year. We conclude that policy interventions are required in those countries to ensure that individuals are not unfairly penalized by their birth month
Grade retention practices are at the forefront of the educational debate. In this paper, we use PISA...
This article uses pupil’s month of birth as a natural experiment to study how immigrant-native inequ...
This article uses pupil’s month of birth as a natural experiment to study how immigrant-native inequ...
Grade retention has been the focus of the education debate in Spain for decades. On average, more th...
This paper uses a large multi-country database with data from the OECD PISA program to disentangle t...
This paper uses a large multi-country database with data from the OECD PISA program to disentangle t...
This paper examines the impact of month of birth on national achievement test scores in England whil...
National audienceThis paper performs a precise quantification of date of birth effects throughout in...
National audienceThis paper performs a precise quantification of date of birth effects throughout in...
National audienceThis paper performs a precise quantification of date of birth effects throughout in...
National audienceThis paper performs a precise quantification of date of birth effects throughout in...
National audienceThis paper performs a precise quantification of date of birth effects throughout in...
Grade retention is still common practice in some countries though longstanding experience tells us t...
The existence of a rigid cut-off date which determines when children start primary school creates a ...
The existence of a rigid cut-off date which determines when children start primary school creates a ...
Grade retention practices are at the forefront of the educational debate. In this paper, we use PISA...
This article uses pupil’s month of birth as a natural experiment to study how immigrant-native inequ...
This article uses pupil’s month of birth as a natural experiment to study how immigrant-native inequ...
Grade retention has been the focus of the education debate in Spain for decades. On average, more th...
This paper uses a large multi-country database with data from the OECD PISA program to disentangle t...
This paper uses a large multi-country database with data from the OECD PISA program to disentangle t...
This paper examines the impact of month of birth on national achievement test scores in England whil...
National audienceThis paper performs a precise quantification of date of birth effects throughout in...
National audienceThis paper performs a precise quantification of date of birth effects throughout in...
National audienceThis paper performs a precise quantification of date of birth effects throughout in...
National audienceThis paper performs a precise quantification of date of birth effects throughout in...
National audienceThis paper performs a precise quantification of date of birth effects throughout in...
Grade retention is still common practice in some countries though longstanding experience tells us t...
The existence of a rigid cut-off date which determines when children start primary school creates a ...
The existence of a rigid cut-off date which determines when children start primary school creates a ...
Grade retention practices are at the forefront of the educational debate. In this paper, we use PISA...
This article uses pupil’s month of birth as a natural experiment to study how immigrant-native inequ...
This article uses pupil’s month of birth as a natural experiment to study how immigrant-native inequ...