Determinants of educational achievement and attainment in Africa : findings from nine case studies
Sign inINSTITUTE FOR POLICY REFORM
This research paper was motivated by observations of declining achievement and enrollment and increasing dropout rates in some African countries.
Ridker, Ronald G. · 1997

Abstract
It presents an overview and nine case studies, which attempt to explain educational achievement and attainment/participation in South Africa, Tanzania, Kenya, Malawi, Mali. Available information on school, household, child, and community characteristics are explored. Four of the studies base their analysis on national sample surveys, the remainder on evidence from field investigations of specific interventions at the primary level. The paper then discusses the significance, limitations, and policy and research implications of the findings. The studies speak to a variety of issues, for example, the importance of socioeconomic as opposed to school characteristics in determining educational outcomes, the effect of quality improvements on enrollment, the importance of hardware versus software, textbooks versus class size, professional versus para-professional teachers, and the role of parent participation. Most of the interventions were found to have positive (or in the case of those that have not been underway very long, promising) impacts. This overview finds that outcomes can differ significantly depending on the context and status of variables from all of the domains considered. This greatly complicates the analysis required and makes simple generalizations about policy difficult, but it should encourage the continued experimentation and search for innovative approaches. (Author abstract)
Connected topics
Classification