@article {1070936, title = {School District Reform in Newark: Within- and Between- School Changes in Achievement Growth}, journal = {NBER Working Paper 23922 }, year = {Working Paper}, abstract = {In 2011-12, Newark launched a set of educational reforms supported by $20 million gift. Using data from 2009 through 2016, we evaluate the change in Newark students{\textquoteright} achievement growth relative to similar students and schools elsewhere in New Jersey. We measure achievement growth using a {\textquotedblleft}value-added{\textquotedblright} model, controlling for prior achievement, demographics and peer characteristics. By the fifth year of reform, Newark saw statistically significant gains in English and no significant change in math achievement growth. Perhaps due to the disruptive nature of the reforms, growth declined initially before rebounding in recent years. Aided by the closure of low value-added schools, much of the improvement was due to shifting enrollment from lower-to higher-growth district and charter schools. Shifting enrollment accounted for 62 percent of the improvement in English. In math, such shifts offset what would have been a decline in achievement growth.}, url = {http://www.nber.org/papers/w23922}, author = {Mark Chin and Tom Kane and W. Kozakowski and Beth Schueler and Doug Staiger} }