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Understanding the impact of Career Academy attendance: An application of the principal stratification framework for causal effects accounting for partial compliance (Page 2012)

  • Findings

    See findings section of this profile.

    Evidence Rating

    Not Rated

Citation

Page, L. C. (2012). Understanding the impact of Career Academy attendance: An application of the principal stratification framework for causal effects accounting for partial compliance. Evaluation Review, 36(2), 99-132.

Highlights

  • The author investigated the impact of the duration of Career Academy enrollment on monthly average earnings following high school graduation using data from a randomized controlled trial conducted by MDRC over a 15-year period. The MDRC study estimated the impact of the offer to attend a Career Academy, whereas this study estimated the impact of attending an academy through graduation.
  • Career Academies’ distinctive features include their division of a large high school into smaller learning communities, integration of career learning into the curriculum, and partnerships with local employers.
  • The analysis centered on three of the nine sites that participated in the original MDRC evaluation. The author used a principal stratification framework and Bayesian inference to estimate the impact of duration of enrollment on monthly earnings following graduation.
  • The author estimated an average impact of $588 per month for males who received an offer to enroll in a Career Academy and remained enrolled in the academy throughout high school; this was higher than the impact of approximately $300 per month estimated from the original study, which included in the sample those who were offered the opportunity to attend a Career Academy but did not do so. These positive impacts were not found for females.

Intervention Examined

Career Academies

Reviewed by CLEAR

April 2014

Topic Area