RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Teacher Shocks and Student Learning JF Journal of Human Resources JO J Hum Resour FD University of Wisconsin Press SP 820 OP 862 DO 10.3368/jhr.XLII.4.820 VO XLII IS 4 A1 Jishnu Das A1 Stefan Dercon A1 James Habyarimana A1 Pramila Krishnan YR 2007 UL http://jhr.uwpress.org/content/XLII/4/820.abstract AB A large literature examines the link between shocks to households and the educational attainment of children. We use new panel data to estimate the impact of shocks to teachers on student learning in Mathematics and English. Using absenteeism in the 30 days preceding the survey as a measure of these shocks, we find no impact for the full sample, but a large impact for a subsample for which we can control for unobserved changes in teacher heterogeneity: A 5 percent increase in the teacher’s absence rate reduces learning by 4 to 8 percent of average gains over the year. Health problems—primarily teachers’ own illness and the illnesses of their family members—account for more than 60 percent of teacher absences. This is not surprising in a country struggling with an HIV/AIDS epidemic.