Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal – Vol.3, No.12
Publication Date: Dec. 25, 2016
DoI:10.14738/assrj.312.2433.
Soares, J.A. & Bandyk, S.A. (2016). What is the Value Added by High-School Infrasturucture and Teacher qualities on Students
Grades. Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal, 3(12) 62-76.
Copyright © Society for Science and Education, United Kingdom 62
What is the Value Added by High-School Infrastructure and
Teacher Qualities on Student Grades?
Joseph A Soares
Chair, Department of Sociology
Professor of Sociology
Wake Forest University
Stephanie A. Bandyk
Department of Sociology
Professor of Sociology
Wake Forest University
Abstract
The assumption that high-school infrastructure and teacher quality have positive
impacts on academic attainments was challenged when Massey and Fischer disclosed a
double paradox. First, infrastructure quality has a negative effect on high school GPA
(Massey, Charles, Lundy, and Fischer, 2003) and a positive effect on college GPA
(Fischer, 2007). And second, teacher quality does not impact GPA, but teachers’
disciplinary practices do. How can the same infrastructure have opposite effects on
grades when one looks at high school versus college? And why does teacher quality not
matter, but disciplinary behavior does matter, to academic performance? Using data
from the National Longitudinal Survey of Freshmen, this study analyzes particular
measures of school infrastructure to ascertain their effects on grades in high school and
college. Our results suggest that the aspect of infrastructure quality that positively
affected freshman GPA was overall school quality, while the aspects that negatively
affected high school GPA were library quality and school’s reputation in the
community. Further, teacher quality was not found to be a positive and significant
predictor of GPA at either the high school or university level. However, teachers’
disciplinary practices, when perceived as either “fair” or “strict” by students, did
matter. When discipline was perceived as “fair”, there was a positive correlation with
high school GPA, and conversely when it was perceived as being “strict” there was a
negative impact on high school GPA. This research provides new evidence regarding
how particular aspects of infrastructure and teacher qualities precisely affect GPA at
both high school and college levels. Studies that do not work with these measures will
misestimate the impact of school resources on outcomes.
Keywords: GPA; school resources; infrastructure; teacher quality; teacher disciplinary
practices; public schools; private schools; religious schools; value added.
INTRODUCTION
In light of continual discussions regarding amounts of educational spending at both the federal
and state levels, in particular on school infrastructure and teacher’s pay, the authors sought to
ascertain the effectiveness such factors had on student outcomes. Investing in a school’s
teachers and infrastructure is meant to positively impact student performance through both
personal well-being and academic achievement. Yet, counter intuitively, distinguished
researchers have discovered the opposite result when working with a longitudinal study of
students at very selective colleges. In the Source of the River, it was found, in a longitudinal
study of students at elite universities, that school quality infrastructure had a negative effect on