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Who becomes a teacher? Relative academic rank and entry into teaching profession
Working paper   Open access

Who becomes a teacher? Relative academic rank and entry into teaching profession

Iman Dadgar, Magnus Nermo and Roujman Shahbazian
2
Working Papers, Stockholm School of Economics, Center for Educational Leadership and Excellence, 25/2, Center for Educational Leadership and Excellence, Stockholm School of Economics
2026

Abstract

Educational inequality Teaching profession Occupational choice School position Reference groups Relative deprivation Sweden
This paper studies how students’ relative academic rank in compulsory school affects entry into the teaching profession. Using population-wide Swedish administrative data, we link grade-9 GPA for cohorts attending grade 9 in 1990–1997 to detailed occupational outcomes observed at age 40. We measure relative position as within-school–cohort GPA rank and estimate rank effects by exploiting variation in ordinal position among students with similar absolute achievement. The empirical design includes school-by-cohort fixed effects and controls for absolute ability via national GPA-rank indicators interacted with grading-environment (school-type) measures, along with family background controls. We find that lower-ranked students are more likely to become teachers, but the pattern differs across teaching segments: low local rank predicts entry into compulsory and upper-secondary teaching, while very high local rank predicts university teaching; there is no clear relationship for pre-school teaching. Effects are concentrated among women and are strongest for women in high-achieving schools. Results are robust to alternative specifications. The findings highlight relative academic standing as an important, previously overlooked determinant of occupational choice into teaching.
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