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Incentives to Learn

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2009

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MIT Press
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Kremer, Michael R., Edward Miguel, and Rebecca Thornton. 2009. Incentives to learn. Review of Economics and Statistics 91(3): 437-456.

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We study a randomized evaluation of a merit scholarship program in which Kenyan girls who scored well on academic exams had school fees paid and received a grant. Girls showed substantial exam score gains, and teacher attendance improved in program schools. There were positive externalities for girls with low pretest scores, who were unlikely to win a scholarship. We see no evidence for weakened intrinsic motivation. There were heterogeneous program effects. In one of the two districts, there were large exam gains and positive spillovers to boys. In the other, attrition complicates estimation, but we cannot reject the hypothesis of no program effect.

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Incentives to Learn… : DASH Story 2013-04-22
I am writing the evaluation report for a large scale mobiles in education project in India. Open Access allows me to review the relevant research and cite reference examples of similar projects for comparison purposes.
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Incentives to Learn… : DASH Story 2013-06-03
I am a professor in Uruguay, and I don't have access to the Review of Economics and Statistics. I read a very interesting article that cites this work, and thought I might review both for a local newspaper, illustrating what works and what doesn't to improve education. I care about education, and sometimes here decisions are made without much information. I thought this might help.