Impact of Incentive Programs on Student Achievement
September 27, 2011
Education incentive programs can raise achievement among even the poorest minority students in the lowest-performing schools if the incentives are given for certain inputs to the educational production function. New research finds that paying students to read books and rewarding students, parents and teachers for student mastery of math objectives raise student achievement. Conversely, the incentive programs that reward students for outputs such as test scores and grades demonstrate less-promising results.

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