The effect of teacher's concurrent administrative position on students' academic outcomes: Evidence and mechanisms

Teacher's holding an administrative position (AP) while teaching is common in schools in China. Does it harm the students' academic performance? This paper uses a representative survey of middle school students in China to answer the question. Using a causal identification based on schools...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inChina economic review Vol. 71; p. 101735
Main Authors Sun, Yucheng, Zhou, Xianbo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Inc 01.02.2022
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Summary:Teacher's holding an administrative position (AP) while teaching is common in schools in China. Does it harm the students' academic performance? This paper uses a representative survey of middle school students in China to answer the question. Using a causal identification based on schools with random class assignments, we find that the effect of a headteacher's holding an AP is negative and significant. In contrast, the effect of a subject teacher's holding an AP may be positive. The results are robust to various robustness checks. The heterogeneity analysis shows that the negative effect is driven by 9th grade students and is larger for boys, rural students, those whose parents migrate out to work, and those whose mothers have lower levels of education. Mechanism analysis suggests that head teachers with an AP devote lower levels of teaching effort, measured by time spent on grading and frequency of adopting supplementary teaching tools. •This paper uses a representative survey of middle schools in China to study the effects of headteachers' holding administrative positions.•Headteacher's holding an administrative position generally lowers students' test scores.•The negative effect is stronger for 9th grade students and students with a lower socioeconomic background.•Underlying mechanisms for the negative effect could be driven by a reduction of teacher effort.
ISSN:1043-951X
1873-7781
DOI:10.1016/j.chieco.2021.101735