The Challenge of Education and Learning in the Developing World

Author:

Kremer Michael1,Brannen Conner1,Glennerster Rachel2

Affiliation:

1. Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.

2. Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

Abstract

Across many different contexts, randomized evaluations find that school participation is sensitive to costs: Reducing out-of-pocket costs, merit scholarships, and conditional cash transfers all increase schooling. Addressing child health and providing information on how earnings rise with education can increase schooling even more cost-effectively. However, among those in school, test scores are remarkably low and unresponsive to more-of-the-same inputs, such as hiring additional teachers, buying more textbooks, or providing flexible grants. In contrast, pedagogical reforms that match teaching to students’ learning levels are highly cost effective at increasing learning, as are reforms that improve accountability and incentives, such as local hiring of teachers on short-term contracts. Technology could potentially improve pedagogy and accountability. Improving pre- and postprimary education are major future challenges.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference39 articles.

1. Improving Education in the Developing World: What Have We Learned from Randomized Evaluations?

2. School subsidies for the poor: evaluating the Mexican Progresa poverty program

3. A. Fiszbein N. Schady F. H. Ferreira Conditional Cash Transfers: Reducing Present and Future Poverty (World Bank Washington DC 2009).

4. S. Baird C. Mcintosh B. Ozler “Cash or condition? Evidence from a cash transfer experiment” (World Bank Policy Research Working Paper Series 5259 World Bank Washington DC 2010).

5. E. Duflo P. Dupas M. Kremer “Education HIV and early fertility: Experimental evidence from Kenya” (MIT Working Paper Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2012) http://economics.mit.edu/files/6951.

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