When inputs are outputs: The case of graduate student instructors

Citation:

Bettinger, Eric P., Bridget Terry Long, and Eric S. Taylor. 2016. “When inputs are outputs: The case of graduate student instructors”. Economics of Education Review 52:63-76.
grad-students-blt.pdf336 KB

Abstract:

We examine graduate student teaching as an input to two production processes: the education of undergraduates and the development of graduate students themselves. Using fluctuations in full-time faculty availability as an instrument, we find undergraduates are more likely to major in a subject if their first course in the subject was taught by a graduate student, a result opposite of estimates that ignore selection. Additionally, graduate students who teach more frequently graduate earlier and are more likely to subsequently be employed by a college or university.

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Last updated on 11/22/2018