Policy reforms to boost full inclusion and conventional return flows send students with special educational needs (SEN) from segregated settings to regular classrooms. Using full population micro data from Denmark, I investigate whether becoming exposed to returning SEN students affects the academic achievement of other students in the school-grade cohort. The basic identification strategy controls for student and school-by-grade fixed effects in value-added test scores and is similar to the model in Hanushek, Kain & Rivkin (2002). I add a third dimension to disentangle differential exposure effects in reform years (=years with extraordinary large numbers of returners). Together with the basic model, this yields a triple differences model providing strong causal identification. The main finding is that becoming exposed to a returning SEN student during the reform period has a negative impact on test score gains of moderate size (-0.036 SD), while no significant effect is found in non-reform years. The results are robust to sensitivity checks. The negative exposure effect is significant only for boys, but does not differ by parental education or grade-level.
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SFI - Det Nationale Forskningscenter for Velfærd