A continuum of ages exists at school entry due to the use of a single school cutoff date-making the "oldest" children approximately 20 percent older than the "youngest" children. We provide substantial evidence that these initial maturity differences have long-lasting effects on student performance across OECD countries. In particular, the youngest members of each cohort score 4-12 percentiles lower than the oldest members in grade four and 2-9 percentiles lower in grade eight. In fact, data from Canada and the United States show that the youngest members of each cohort are even less likely to attend university. Copyright by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Single-date school entry systems create large age differences between children in the same grade. Ol...
The consequences of single-date school entry systems, which generate a large age difference between ...
The impact of chronological age on academic success has been a controversial topic in education for ...
School starting age/date rules mean that there is a continuum of ages within each starting class – ...
School starting age/date rules mean that there is a continuum of ages within each starting class – w...
Most jurisdictions worldwide have a single specific cut-off date which determines when a student can...
This article examines the impact of relative age at school entry on school performance, educational ...
The existence of a rigid cut-off date which determines when children start primary school creates a ...
Using data for 9, 13 and 15-year-old students from three different datasets (PIRLS-2006, TIMSS-2007a...
This paper uses a large multi-country database with data from the OECD PISA program to disentangle t...
We investigate the long lasting effects on behaviour of relative age at school. We conduct an online...
In this paper, we estimate the effect of pupil’s relative age within the first grade of primary scho...
© 2021To study the long-term effects of school-starting-age rules in a setting with early ability tr...
We investigate the long-lasting effects on behaviour of relative age at school. We conduct an online...
There is continuing controversy about the optimal or appropriate age at which children should start ...
Single-date school entry systems create large age differences between children in the same grade. Ol...
The consequences of single-date school entry systems, which generate a large age difference between ...
The impact of chronological age on academic success has been a controversial topic in education for ...
School starting age/date rules mean that there is a continuum of ages within each starting class – ...
School starting age/date rules mean that there is a continuum of ages within each starting class – w...
Most jurisdictions worldwide have a single specific cut-off date which determines when a student can...
This article examines the impact of relative age at school entry on school performance, educational ...
The existence of a rigid cut-off date which determines when children start primary school creates a ...
Using data for 9, 13 and 15-year-old students from three different datasets (PIRLS-2006, TIMSS-2007a...
This paper uses a large multi-country database with data from the OECD PISA program to disentangle t...
We investigate the long lasting effects on behaviour of relative age at school. We conduct an online...
In this paper, we estimate the effect of pupil’s relative age within the first grade of primary scho...
© 2021To study the long-term effects of school-starting-age rules in a setting with early ability tr...
We investigate the long-lasting effects on behaviour of relative age at school. We conduct an online...
There is continuing controversy about the optimal or appropriate age at which children should start ...
Single-date school entry systems create large age differences between children in the same grade. Ol...
The consequences of single-date school entry systems, which generate a large age difference between ...
The impact of chronological age on academic success has been a controversial topic in education for ...