← Search

Help or Hindrance? The Effects of College Remediation on Academic and Labor Market Outcomes

Paco Martorell1; Isaac McFarlin2

1 RAND Corporation · 2 University of Michigan–Ann Arbor

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2011

Providing remedial (also known as developmental) education is the primary way colleges cope with students who do not have the academic preparation needed to succeed in college-level courses. Remediation is widespread, with nearly one-third of entering freshmen taking remedial courses at an annual cost of at least $1 billion. Despite its prevalence, there is uncertainty surrounding its short- and longer-run effects. This paper presents new evidence on this question using longitudinal administrative data from Texas and a regression discontinuity research design. We find little indication that remediation improves academic or labor market outcomes.

DOI
10.1162/rest_a_00098
Volume
93 (2)
Pages
436-454
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref