Development Discouragement or Diversion? New Evidence on the Effects of College Remediation

Working Paper: NBER ID: w18328

Authors: Judith Scott-Clayton; Olga Rodriguez

Abstract: Half of all college students take at least one remedial course as part of their postsecondary experience, despite mixed evidence on the effectiveness of this intervention. Using a regression-discontinuity design with data from a large urban community college system, we extend the research on remediation in three ways. First, we articulate three alternative models of remediation to help guide interpretation of sometimes conflicting results in the literature. Second, in addition to credits and degree completion we examine several under-explored outcomes, including the initial decision to enroll, grades in subsequent college courses, and post-treatment proficiency test scores. Finally, we exploit rich high school background data to examine heterogeneity in the impact of remedial assignment by predicted academic risk. We find that remediation does little to develop students' skills. But we also find relatively little evidence that it discourages either initial enrollment or persistence, except for a subgroup we identify as potentially mis-assigned to remediation. Instead, the primary effect of remediation appears to be diversionary: students simply take remedial courses instead of college-level courses. These diversionary effects are largest for the lowest-risk students. Implications for remediation policy are discussed.

Keywords: remediation; college education; community colleges

JEL Codes: I21; I23


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
assignment to remediation (C90)students' skills (A29)
assignment to remediation (C90)rates of college success (I23)
assignment to remediation (C90)initial enrollment (Y20)
assignment to remediation (C90)persistence (C41)
misassignment to remediation (Y40)dropout rates (I21)
assignment to remediation (C90)diversion to remedial courses (Y40)
diversion to remedial courses (Y40)college-level courses (A21)

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