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Schools and Learning in Rural India and Pakistan: Who Goes Where, and How Much are they Learning?

journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-05, 22:12 authored by Benjamin Alcott, Pauline Rose
It is increasingly recognized that there is a global learning crisis. This article investigates this learning crisis through a comparative analysis of rural India and Pakistan. Using data from each country’s Annual Status of Education Report, it demonstrates that socioeconomic status and gender are important determinants of whether children are in school, the type of school they attend, and whether they are learning. While learning varies across schools, socioeconomic disparities predominate: disadvantaged children in private schools are learning less than more advantaged children in government schools. Gender also plays an important role, with disparities between boys and girls most pronounced among poorer children in Pakistan. In addition, while private tuition improves learning for all children, it does not resolve socioeconomic and gender disparities. The study indicates that policymakers need to focus on government schools since that is where most of the poorest children study and where learning levels are lowest. The fact that more advantaged children are learning in government schools indicates the role that such schools can play in education. Please note: we do not have permission to upload this as a record but you can follow the link to the full document externally.

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Publisher

Springer Netherlands

Citation

Alcott, B. & Rose, P. Prospects (2015) 45: 345. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11125-015-9350-5

Series

Prospects Vol 45, Issue 3, September 2015

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Article

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© UNESCO IBE 2015

Country

India; Pakistan

Language

en

Project identifier

Default project::9ce4e4dc-26e9-4d78-96e9-15e4dcac0642::600

Identifier Ag

ES/M005445/1

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    Impact Initiative - Children and Young People

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