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Research ArticleArticles

Schooling and the Armed Forces Qualifying Test

Evidence from School-Entry Laws

Elizabeth U. Cascio and Ethan G. Lewis
Journal of Human Resources, March 2006, XLI (2) 294-318; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/jhr.XLI.2.294
Elizabeth U. Cascio
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Ethan G. Lewis
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Abstract

How much can late schooling investments close racial and ethnic skill gaps? We investigate this question by exploiting the large differences in completed schooling that arise among teenagers with birthdays near school-entry cutoff dates. We estimate that an additional year of high school raises the Armed Forces Qualifying Test (AFQT) scores of minorities in the NLSY 79 by 0.31 to 0.32 standard deviations. These estimates imply that closing existing racial and ethnic gaps in schooling could close skill gaps by between 25 and 50 percent. Our approach also uncovers a significant direct effect of season of birth on test scores, suggesting that previous estimates using season of birth as an instrument for schooling are biased.

  • Received March 2005.
  • Accepted September 2005.
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Journal of Human Resources
Vol. XLI, Issue 2
31 Mar 2006
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Schooling and the Armed Forces Qualifying Test
Elizabeth U. Cascio, Ethan G. Lewis
Journal of Human Resources Mar 2006, XLI (2) 294-318; DOI: 10.3368/jhr.XLI.2.294

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Schooling and the Armed Forces Qualifying Test
Elizabeth U. Cascio, Ethan G. Lewis
Journal of Human Resources Mar 2006, XLI (2) 294-318; DOI: 10.3368/jhr.XLI.2.294
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  • Kindergarten Entrance Age and Children's Achievement: Impacts of State Policies, Family Background, and Peers
  • The Benefits of Delayed Primary School Enrollment: Discontinuity Estimates Using Exact Birth Dates
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