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New England Public Policy Center
Working Paper No. 08-3
by David Deming and Susan Dynarski, Harvard Kennedy School,
Harvard University
Forty years ago, 96 percent of six-year-old children were
enrolled in first grade or above. As of 2005, the figure was
just 84 percent. The school attendance rate of six-year-olds
has not decreased; rather, they are increasingly likely to
be enrolled in kindergarten rather than first grade. This
paper documents this historical shift. We show that only about
a quarter of the change can be proximately explained by changes
in school entry laws; the rest reflects "academic redshirting,"
the practice of enrolling a child in a grade lower than the
one for which he is eligible. We show that the decreased grade
attainment of six-year-olds reverberates well beyond the kindergarten
classroom. Recent stagnation in the high school and college
completion rates of young people is partly explained by their
later start in primary school. The relatively late start of
boys in primary school explains a small but significant portion
of the rising gender gaps in high school graduation and college
completion. Increases in the age of legal school entry intensify
socioeconomic differences in educational attainment, since
lower-income children are at greater risk of dropping out
of school when they reach the legal age of school exit.
Full-text paper 
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