Discussion paper

DP19919 Managerial Practices and Student Performance: Evidence from Changes in School Principals

We study how managerial practices of school principals affect student performance and aspirations. For 2011 and 2015, we merge administrative data on Italian high school students with the management quality indices of their principals, constructed using the World Management Survey methodology. The frequent principals' turnover over this period allows us to causally interpret school-fixed-effect estimates. We find that management quality positively and substantially impacts standardized math and language tests and student desire to attend college. The comparison to pooled-OLS suggests that fixed effects correct for the downward bias arising from selection of better principals into more difficult schools.

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Citation

Di Liberto, A, L Giua, F Schivardi, M Sideri and G Sulis (2025), ‘DP19919 Managerial Practices and Student Performance: Evidence from Changes in School Principals‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 19919. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp19919