Evaluating Kindergarten Retention Policy:
A Case Study of Causal Inference for Multi-Level Observational Data
Guanglei Hong
Stephen W. Raudenbush
ABSTRACT
This
article considers the policy of retaining low-achieving children in
kindergarten rather than promoting them to first grade. Under the
stable-unit-treatment-value assumption (SUTVA) as articulated by Rubin, each
child at risk of retention has two potential outcomes: Y(1) if retained and Y(0)
if promoted. However, SUTVA is questionable because a child’s potential
outcomes will plausibly depend on which school that child attends and also on
treatment assignments of other children. We develop a causal model that allows
school assignment and peer treatments to affect one’s potential outcomes. We
impose an identifying assumption that peer effects can be summarized via a
scalar function of the vector of treatment assignments in a school. Using a
large, nationally representative sample, we then estimate: (1) the effect of
being retained in kindergarten rather than being promoted to the first grade in
schools having a low retention rate; (2) the retention effect in schools having
a high retention rate; and (3) the effect of being promoted in a low-retention
school as compared to being promoted in a high-retention school. This third
effect is not definable under SUTVA. We use multi-level propensity-score
stratification to approximate a two-stage experiment. At the first stage,
intact schools are blocked on covariates and then, within blocks, randomly
assigned to a policy of retaining comparatively more or fewer children in
kindergarten. At the second stage, “at risk” students within schools are
blocked on covariates and then assigned at random to be retained. We find
evidence that retainees learned less, on average,
than did similar children who were promoted, a result found in both
high-retention and low-retention schools. We do not detect a peer treatment
effect on low-risk students.