Scientific article 2022
Pushed out of the education system: using a natural experiment to evaluate consequences for boys
Authors:
- Kira Solveig Larsen
- Lars Højsgaard Andersen
- Britt Østergaard Larsen
- The Social Sector
- Children, Adolescents and Families
- Daycare, school and education The Social Sector, Children, Adolescents and Families, Daycare, school and education
Objectives
To examine the short-term effects of admission requirements for upper secondary vocational education and training (VET) on enrollment and criminal offending among academically low-achieving boys.
Methods
We apply multi-group difference-in-differences models to full population data and analyze an educational policy reform in Denmark (N = 60,759).
Results
The reform caused a 16 percentage points lower enrollment in VET among academically low-achieving boys, and their risk of being charged with a crime increased by up to two percentage points 9 months after the end of compulsory school. However, after 12 months, the effect on criminal charges disappeared.
Conclusion
In the education-crime nexus, educational enrollment in upper secondary education is an understudied margin, which has important implications for both scholars and policy-makers. Limitations include the short follow-up period and that the analyses examine effects for boys only.
To examine the short-term effects of admission requirements for upper secondary vocational education and training (VET) on enrollment and criminal offending among academically low-achieving boys.
Methods
We apply multi-group difference-in-differences models to full population data and analyze an educational policy reform in Denmark (N = 60,759).
Results
The reform caused a 16 percentage points lower enrollment in VET among academically low-achieving boys, and their risk of being charged with a crime increased by up to two percentage points 9 months after the end of compulsory school. However, after 12 months, the effect on criminal charges disappeared.
Conclusion
In the education-crime nexus, educational enrollment in upper secondary education is an understudied margin, which has important implications for both scholars and policy-makers. Limitations include the short follow-up period and that the analyses examine effects for boys only.
Authors
About this publication
Financed by
VIVE, Danmarks Frie ForskningsfondCollaborators
Lars Højsgaard Andersen, ROCKWOOL Fondens ForskningsenhedPublished in
Journal of Experimental Criminology