Skills and Selection into Teaching: Evidence from Latin America
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Economía LACEA Journal (e-ISSN: 1533-6239)
Abstract
This paper documents a novel stylized fact: many teachers in Latin America have low levels
of cognitive skills. This fact is the result of both low levels of skills among the population
and—in the case of numeracy—a gap between the average skill level of teachers and
the rest of the tertiary-educated population (i.e., a teacher skills gap). To characterize
the selection patterns behind this gap, we show that individuals with a teaching degree
have lower average skills than individuals with other tertiary degrees, and that this gap
is larger than the teacher skills gap. This difference is mainly explained by the selection
into teaching of graduates from non-teaching degrees. Finally, we show evidence on one
important determinant of the teacher skills gap: teacher relative wages are decreasing
in skills.
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Keywords
Calidad de la Educación, Educational Quality, Eficacia del docente, Teacher effectiveness, Salario del profesor, Teacher wages, Mercado de Trabajo, Labor market