Open Access Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington
Browse
- No file added yet -

Understanding peer effects: On the nature, estimation, and channels of peer effects

Download (1.17 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2022-08-03, 00:01 authored by Jan FeldJan Feld, U Zölitz
This paper estimates peer effects in a university context where students are randomly assigned to sections. While students benefit from better peers on average, low-achieving students are harmed by high-achieving peers. Analyzing students’ course evaluations suggests that peer effects are driven by improved group interaction rather than adjustments in teachers’ behavior or students’ effort. Building on Angrist’s research, we further show that classical measurement error in a setting where group assignment is systematic can lead to a substantial overestimation of peer effects. However, when group assignment is random—like in our setting—peer effect estimates are biased toward zero.

History

Preferred citation

Feld, J. & Zölitz, U. (2017). Understanding peer effects: On the nature, estimation, and channels of peer effects. Journal of Labor Economics, 35(2), 387-428. https://doi.org/10.1086/689472

Journal title

Journal of Labor Economics

Volume

35

Issue

2

Publication date

2017-04-01

Pagination

387-428

Publisher

University of Chicago Press

Publication status

Published

Contribution type

Article

Online publication date

2017-01-30

ISSN

0734-306X

eISSN

1537-5307

Language

en