Effects of Kindergarten Retention Policy on Children’s Cognitive Growth in Reading and Mathematics
- 1 September 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Educational Research Association (AERA) in Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis
- Vol. 27 (3) , 205-224
- https://doi.org/10.3102/01623737027003205
Abstract
Grade retention has been controversial for many years, and current calls to end social promotion have lent new urgency to this issue. On the one hand, a policy of retaining in grade those students making slow progress might facilitate instruction by making classrooms more homogeneous academically. On the other hand, grade retention might harm high-risk students by limiting their learning opportunities. Analyzing data from the US Early Childhood Longitudinal Study Kindergarten cohort with the technique of multilevel propensity score stratification, we find no evidence that a policy of grade retention in kindergarten improves average achievement in mathematics or reading. Nor do we find evidence that the policy benefits children who would be promoted under the policy. However, the evidence does suggest that children who are retained learn less than they would have had they instead been promoted. The negative effect of grade retention on those retained has little influence on the overall mean achievement of children attending schools with a retention policy because the fraction of children retained in those schools is quite small. Nevertheless, the effect of retention on the retainees is considerably large.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Failure in Grade: Do Retained Students Catch Up?The Journal of Educational Research, 1993
- Grade Retention and School Adjustment: An Explanatory AnalysisEducational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1992
- American Educational Research Journal, 1992
- Impact of grade retention on the social development of elementary school children.Developmental Psychology, 1987
- A Longitudinal Study of the Effects of Retention/Promotion on Academic AchievementAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1987
- Statistics and Causal InferenceJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1986
- Dropping out of High School in the United States: An Observational StudyJournal of Educational Statistics, 1986
- Reducing Bias in Observational Studies Using Subclassification on the Propensity ScoreJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1984
- The central role of the propensity score in observational studies for causal effectsBiometrika, 1983
- Transition rooms: Promoting maturation or reducing education?Journal of Educational Psychology, 1980