Publication Date

7-1-2015

Series

Upjohn Institute working paper ; 15-231

**Published Version**

In Economics of Education Review 52: 209-224 (June 2016).

DOI

10.17848/wp15-231

Abstract

Teachers are an important source of information for traditionally disadvantaged students. However, little is known about how teachers form expectations and whether they are systematically biased. We investigate whether student-teacher demographic mismatch affects high school teachers’ expectations for students’ educational attainment. Using a student fixed effects strategy that exploits expectations data from two teachers per student, we find that non-black teachers of black students have significantly lower expectations than do black teachers. These effects are larger for black male students and math teachers. Our findings add to a growing literature on the role of limited information in perpetuating educational attainment gaps.

Issue Date

July 2015

Subject Areas

EDUCATION; K-12 Education

Share

Get in touch with the expert

Want to arrange to discuss this work with the author(s)? Contact our .

Included in

Education Commons

COinS
 

Citation

Gershenson, Seth, Stephen B. Holt, and Nicholas W. Papageorge. 2015. "Who Believes in Me? The Effect of Student-Teacher Demographic Match on Teacher Expectations." Upjohn Institute Working Paper 15-231. Kalamazoo, MI: W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research. https://doi.org/10.17848/wp15-231