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The effect of smaller classes on infection-related school absence: Evidence from the Project STAR randomized controlled trial

In an effort to reduce viral transmission, many schools are planning to reduce class size if they have not reduced it already. Yet the effect of class size on transmission is unknown. To determine whether smaller classes reduce school absence, especially when community disease prevalence is high, we merge data from the Project STAR randomized class size trial with influenza and pneumonia data from the 122 Cities Mortality Reporting System on deaths from pneumonia and influenza.

Project STAR was a block-randomized trial that followed 10,816 Tennessee schoolchildren from kindergarten in 1985-86 through third grade in 1988-89. Children were assigned at random to small classes (13 to 17 students), regular-sized classes (22 to 26 students), and regular-sized class with a teacher’s aide.

Mixed effects regression showed that small classes reduced absence, but not necessarily by reducing infection. In particular, small classes reduced absence by 0.43 days/year (95% CI -0.06 to -0.80, p<0.05), but had no significant interaction with pneumonia and influenza mortality (95% CI -0.27 to +0.30, p>0.90). Small classes, by themselves, may not suffice to reduce the spread of viruses.

Keywords
Influenza, infection, class size
Education level
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/2bsy-ef57

EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:

von Hippel, Paul T. . (). The effect of smaller classes on infection-related school absence: Evidence from the Project STAR randomized controlled trial. (EdWorkingPaper: 21-408). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/2bsy-ef57

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