From 1994 to 2007, she was a faculty member of
Harvard University, first as an assistant professor, then as Morris Kahn Associate Professor of Economics, and starting in 2001 as the Allie S. Freed Professor of Economics.[4] She was the university's only
African-American economics professor with
tenure.[6] In 2005, she was appointed to be one of the 24 Harvard College Professors.[7][8] In 2006, she won the Phi Beta Kappa Teaching Prize.[9] She moved to
Stanford University in 2007, where she is the Scott and Donya Bommer Professor of Economics.[4] She was named the John and Lydia Pearce Mitchell University Fellow in Undergraduate Education in 2014.[10]
She has been married to Blair Hoxby, also a Harvard graduate and a
Rhodes Scholar, since 1993. He is currently a faculty member in the English department at Stanford University and does scholarly work on
John Milton and Renaissance theater.[6][11][12]
In 2014, Caroline Hoxby intentionally injured a Stanford student to the point of bleeding by threatening them with garden shears. At approximately 11 PM, the Hoxbys were involved in a physical confrontation at Kappa Sigma where Caroline Hoxby attempted to cut the speaker cords with a pair of garden shears. After going after the speaker cords unsuccessfully, she grabbed a student's ear and twisted it until it bled, yelling "turn the music off right now".[13][14]
Research
Hoxby's research focuses on higher education policy, with an emphasis on elite colleges and universities. Hoxby is a Principal Investigator of the Expanding College Opportunities project, a randomized controlled trial that had dramatic effects on low-income, high achievers' college-going. For work related to this project, she recently received The Smithsonian Institution's Ingenuity Award.[15] Her research in this area began with a demonstration that low-income high achievers usually fail to apply to any selective college.[16][17][18][19][20][21] This is despite the fact that they are extremely likely to be admitted and receive such generous financial aid that they usually pay much less to attend selective colleges than they do to attend non-selective schools. This issue is now being addressed systematically owing to the project's evidence that individualized but inexpensive informational interventions cause students to take fuller advantage of their opportunities.
One of Hoxby's most-cited papers, "Does Competition among Public Schools Benefit Students and Taxpayers?" (American Economic Review, 2000), argues that increased school choice improves educational outcomes for all students by improving school quality.
Jesse Rothstein published a paper in which he stated that Hoxby's result depended on her hand-count of the main
instrumental variable, and that he was unable to replicate her results with any of several alternative measures.[22] Hoxby later published a response in defense of her original work.[23] The debate received coverage in the mainstream press.[24][25]
Selected publications
Edited books
Caroline M. Hoxby (editor). 2003. The Economics of School Choice. University of Chicago Press.
ISBN978-0-226-35533-7.
Caroline M. Hoxby (editor). 2004. College Choices: The Economics of Where to Go, When to Go, and How to Pay for It. University of Chicago Press.
ISBN978-0-226-35535-1.
Jeffrey R. Brown and Caroline M. Hoxby (editors). 2015. How the Financial Crisis and Great Recession Affected Higher Education. University of Chicago Press.
ISBN978-0-226-20183-2.
ISBN978-0-226-20197-9.
Caroline M. Hoxby (editor). 2008. Higher Aspirations: An Agenda for Reforming European Universities. Bruegel Blueprint Series.
ISBN978-90-78910-07-7.
Caroline M. Hoxby (author). 2006. The Three Essential Elements and Several Policy Options. Education Forum.
ISBN978-0-9582725-0-6.
Caroline M. Hoxby (multi-author). 2010. American Education in 2030. Hoover Institution Press.[26]
Caroline M. Hoxby (multi-author). 2012. Choice and Federalism: Defining the Federal Role in Education. Hoover Institution Press.
ISBN978-0-8179-1484-4.
Awards and honors
The awards and honors that Hoxby has received are:
^Hoxby, Caroline (2007). "Does Competition Among Public Schools Benefit Students and Taxpayers? Reply". American Economic Review. 97 (5): 2038–55.
doi:
10.1257/aer.97.5.2038.
JSTOR30034600.