← Search

Teachers, Race, and Student Achievement in a Randomized Experiment

Thomas S. Dee

Swarthmore College

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2004

Recommendations for the aggressive recruitment of minority teachers are based on hypothesized role-model effects for minority students as well as evidence of racial biases among nonminority teachers. However, prior empirical studies have found little or no association between exposure to an own-race teacher and student achievement. This paper presents new evidence on this question by examining the test score data from Tennessee's Project STAR class-size experiment, which randomly matched students and teachers within participating schools. Specification checks confirm that the racial pairings of students and teachers in this experiment were unrelated to other student traits. Models of student achievement indicate that assignment to an own-race teacher significantly increased the math and reading achievement of both black and white students.

DOI
10.1162/003465304323023750
Volume
86 (1)
Pages
195-210
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
crossref openalex