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Abstract
There is a great degree of heterogeneity among the studies that investigate
whether computer technologies improve education and how students benefit from them –
if at all. The overall goal of this study is to assess the effectiveness of computing
technologies to raise educational performance and non-cognitive outcomes and identify
what program components are most effective in doing so. To achieve this aim we pool the
data sets of five separate studies about computer technology programs that include
observations of 16,856 students from 148 primary schools across three provinces in
China. We find that overall computing technologies have positive and significant impacts
on student academic achievement in both math and in Chinese. The programs are found
to be more effective if they are implemented out-of-school, avoiding what appear to be
substitution effects when programs are run during school. The programs also have
heterogeneous effects by gender. Specifically, boys gain more than girls in Chinese. We
did not find heterogeneous effects by student initial achievement levels. We also found
that the programs that help students learn math—but not Chinese—have positive impacts
on student self-efficacy.