Abstract
Many most well-known charter schools in the United States use a No Excuses approach. We conduct the first meta-analysis of the achievement impacts of No Excuses charter schools, focusing on experimental, lottery-based studies. We estimate that No Excuses charter schools increase student math and literacy achievement by 0.25 and 0.17, respectively, for approximately each year of attendance. These are large and meaningful gains. Moreover, these effects are substantially larger than those of attending other kinds of charter schools. We discuss policy implications and offer necessary caveats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Topics
Research
Research
Mathematics
Literacy
Charter Schools