Discovering Opportunities in New York City's Discovery Program: Disadvantaged Students in Highly Competitive Markets
Yuri Faenza, Swati Gupta, Xuan Zhang

TL;DR
This paper analyzes NYC's Discovery program's impact on disadvantaged students, revealing it creates blocking pairs and incentives to underperform, and proposes the joint-seat allocation mechanism as a superior alternative based on theoretical and empirical evidence.
Contribution
It introduces the high competitiveness condition and demonstrates that the joint-seat allocation mechanism outperforms minority reserve under this condition, supported by NYC data.
Findings
Discovery program creates about 950 blocking pairs annually.
JSA mechanism outperforms MR in high competitiveness markets.
Empirical data confirms theoretical advantages of JSA.
Abstract
Discovery program (DISC) is a policy used by the New York City Department of Education (NYC DOE) to increase the number of admissions of students from low socio-economic background to specialized high schools. This policy has been instrumental in increasing the number of disadvantaged students attending these schools. However, assuming that students care more about the school they are assigned to rather than the type of seat they occupy (\emph{school-over-seat hypothesis}), our empirical analysis using data from 12 recent academic years shows that DISC creates about 950 in-group blocking pairs each year amongst disadvantaged students, impacting about 650 disadvantaged students every year. Moreover, we find that this program does not respect improvements, thus unintentionally creating an incentive to under-perform. These experimental results are confirmed by our theoretical analysis.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGame Theory and Voting Systems · School Choice and Performance · Auction Theory and Applications
