Lowering Barriers to Remote Education: Experimental Impacts on Parental Responses and Learning

Resource type
Preprint
Authors/contributors
Title
Lowering Barriers to Remote Education: Experimental Impacts on Parental Responses and Learning
Abstract
We conduct a randomized controlled trial with households of secondary school students in Bangladesh to investigate how parents adjust their investments in response to three educational interventions: an informational campaign about an educational phone application, an internet data subsidy, and one-on-one phone learning support. We find that offering an educational service in a context where other barriers to take-up exist can still trigger parental educational investments by acting as a signal or nudge. These behavioral changes result in lasting learning gains concentrated among richer households, reflecting that the relevant behavior change—increased tutoring investment—is easier for them to implement. In contrast, when interventions do increase take-up, they have the potential to narrow the socioeconomic achievement gap. We observe that increased usage of the targeted educational service limits parental behavioral responses. This implies that learning gains in these cases are directly caused by the potential effectiveness of the services adopted. In our setting, remote one-to-one teacher support improves learning among students from poorer households, whereas receiving the free data package jointly with the app information has no impact on learning.
Genre
SSRN Scholarly Paper
Archive ID
4234910
Place
Rochester, NY
Date
2022-10-01
Accessed
19/02/2024, 18:45
Short Title
Lowering Barriers to Remote Education
Language
en
Library Catalogue
Social Science Research Network
Citation
Beam, E., Mukherjee, P., & Navarro-Sola, L. (2022). Lowering Barriers to Remote Education: Experimental Impacts on Parental Responses and Learning (SSRN Scholarly Paper No. 4234910). https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4234910