Volume 46, Issue 1 p. 92-121
Original Paper

The effect of modular education on school dropout

Deni Mazrekaj,

Corresponding Author

Leuven Economics of Education Research (LEER), KU Leuven, Belgium

Corresponding author. Leuven Economics of Education Research (LEER), KU Leuven, Naamsestraat 69, 3000 Leuven, Belgium. E-mail: deni.mazrekaj@kuleuven.beSearch for more papers by this author
Kristof De Witte,

Leuven Economics of Education Research (LEER), KU Leuven, Belgium

United Nations University – Maastricht Economic and Social Research Institute on Innovation and Technology (UNU-MERIT), Maastricht University, The Netherlands

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First published: 13 August 2019
Citations: 2
The data for this study are protected by a confidentiality agreement and we are precluded from sharing the data with others. Interested readers can contact the corresponding author for information on how to obtain access to the data. We would be happy to provide assistance and Stata code to replicate the results of this paper.

Abstract

Modular education refers to the division of conventional courses into smaller components or modules. Each module enables students to obtain a partial certificate that can be combined into a qualification. This article evaluates whether modular education, which is widely used in secondary and tertiary education, has been effective in reducing school dropout. For this purpose, the study exploits a policy change in the Flemish Community of Belgium, which recently introduced modular education for some programmes. Using a difference-in-differences framework with diverse adoption dates per school, the results indicate that modular education may significantly reduce school dropout by 2.5 percentage points, with the largest effects on foreign origin students. Therefore, modular education is likely to be an effective policy to tackle school dropout and reduce the ethnic attainment gap. Additionally, students enrolled in modular education are more likely to be employed and to incur higher earnings on the labour market.