Cognitive and non-cognitive predictors of success in adult education programs: Evidence from experimental data with low-income welfare recipients
Using data on approximately 2,000 low-income welfare recipients in a three-site random-assignment intervention conducted in the early 1990s (the NEWWS), we examine the role of cognitive and non-cognitive factors in moderating experimental impacts of an adult education training program for women who lacked a high school degree or GED at the time of random assignment. Both cognitive and noncognitive skills (in particular, locus of control) moderate treatment impacts. For the sample as a whole, assignment to an education-focused program had a statistically significant (albeit modest) 8 percentage point impact on the probability of degree receipt. For those with low cognitive skills, virtually all of these program impacts were eliminated. However, non-cognitive skills play a substantively important role such that women with high cognitive skills but low non-cognitive skills are only half as likely to earn a degree as their counterparts with high skills of both types. © 2008 by the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management.
Year of publication: |
2008
|
---|---|
Authors: | Leininger, Lindsey Jeanne ; Kalil, Ariel |
Published in: |
Journal of Policy Analysis and Management. - John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., ISSN 0276-8739. - Vol. 27.2008, 3, p. 521-535
|
Publisher: |
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Low-income mothers' social support and children's injuries
Leininger, Lindsey Jeanne, (2009)
-
Medicaid expansions and the insurance coverage of poor teenagers
Leininger, Lindsey Jeanne, (2009)
-
Why are low-income teens more likely to lack health insurance than their younger peers?
Leininger, Lindsey Jeanne, (2011)
- More ...