id okr-10986-10377
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-103772021-04-23T14:02:50Z Bringing the School to the Children : Shortening the Path to EFA Lehman, Douglas ADDITION BASIC EDUCATION CLASSROOM CONSTRUCTION DISTANCE TO SCHOOL EDUCATION OFFICIALS EDUCATION PROGRAMS EDUCATION SYSTEM EDUCATION SYSTEMS ENROLLMENT ENROLLMENT RATES FIELD RESEARCH GER GIRLS GIRLS ENROLLMENT INSTRUCTION LANGUAGE OF INSTRUCTION LOW ENROLLMENT OUT-OF-SCHOOL CHILDREN PRIMARY EDUCATION PRIMARY SCHOOLS QUALITY OF EDUCATION RURAL AREAS RURAL SCHOOLS SCHOOLS TEACHER TEACHER EDUCATION TEACHER EDUCATION PROGRAMS TEACHER RECRUITMENT TEACHERS TEACHING TEACHING TECHNIQUES URBAN AREAS SCHOOL BASED MANAGEMENT EDUCATION PROGRAMS BASIC EDUCATION RURAL AREAS PRIMARY EDUCATION TEACHERS RURAL COMMUNITIES RURAL SCHOOLS Recent education planning initiatives in West and Central Africa show that the path to EFA may be shortened considerably by reconsidering the way basic education is delivered in isolated rural communities. Since independence, education systems have been expanding rapidly and are now serving most of the easy-to-reach population. For progress to continue, the focus must be shifted toward the sparsely populated areas, which means adjusting the type of schools used, and building them close to where children live. Most out-of-school children live in rural areas. Unfortunately, few rural schools offer the complete primary cycle. A number of factors contribute to the incomplete-cycle phenomenon. The most significant is that the potential student population is insufficient for a three- or six-teacher school. Having children walk to school from neighboring villages also contributes to low enrollment and low student-teacher ratios. Since teachers generally do not teach more than 1 or 2 grades at a time in a classroom, rural communities usually have low student-teacher ratios, and education system administrators cannot justify sending additional teachers to the school. In addition, schools with incomplete cycles tend to have extremely low survival rates. 2012-08-13T11:18:07Z 2012-08-13T11:18:07Z 2003-08 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/08/2535411/bringing-school-children-shortening-path-efa http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10377 English Education Notes CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research Africa
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ADDITION
BASIC EDUCATION
CLASSROOM CONSTRUCTION
DISTANCE TO SCHOOL
EDUCATION OFFICIALS
EDUCATION PROGRAMS
EDUCATION SYSTEM
EDUCATION SYSTEMS
ENROLLMENT
ENROLLMENT RATES
FIELD RESEARCH
GER
GIRLS
GIRLS ENROLLMENT
INSTRUCTION
LANGUAGE OF INSTRUCTION
LOW ENROLLMENT
OUT-OF-SCHOOL CHILDREN
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY SCHOOLS
QUALITY OF EDUCATION
RURAL AREAS
RURAL SCHOOLS
SCHOOLS
TEACHER
TEACHER EDUCATION
TEACHER EDUCATION PROGRAMS
TEACHER RECRUITMENT
TEACHERS
TEACHING
TEACHING TECHNIQUES
URBAN AREAS SCHOOL BASED MANAGEMENT
EDUCATION PROGRAMS
BASIC EDUCATION
RURAL AREAS
PRIMARY EDUCATION
TEACHERS
RURAL COMMUNITIES
RURAL SCHOOLS
spellingShingle ADDITION
BASIC EDUCATION
CLASSROOM CONSTRUCTION
DISTANCE TO SCHOOL
EDUCATION OFFICIALS
EDUCATION PROGRAMS
EDUCATION SYSTEM
EDUCATION SYSTEMS
ENROLLMENT
ENROLLMENT RATES
FIELD RESEARCH
GER
GIRLS
GIRLS ENROLLMENT
INSTRUCTION
LANGUAGE OF INSTRUCTION
LOW ENROLLMENT
OUT-OF-SCHOOL CHILDREN
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY SCHOOLS
QUALITY OF EDUCATION
RURAL AREAS
RURAL SCHOOLS
SCHOOLS
TEACHER
TEACHER EDUCATION
TEACHER EDUCATION PROGRAMS
TEACHER RECRUITMENT
TEACHERS
TEACHING
TEACHING TECHNIQUES
URBAN AREAS SCHOOL BASED MANAGEMENT
EDUCATION PROGRAMS
BASIC EDUCATION
RURAL AREAS
PRIMARY EDUCATION
TEACHERS
RURAL COMMUNITIES
RURAL SCHOOLS
Lehman, Douglas
Bringing the School to the Children : Shortening the Path to EFA
geographic_facet Africa
relation Education Notes
description Recent education planning initiatives in West and Central Africa show that the path to EFA may be shortened considerably by reconsidering the way basic education is delivered in isolated rural communities. Since independence, education systems have been expanding rapidly and are now serving most of the easy-to-reach population. For progress to continue, the focus must be shifted toward the sparsely populated areas, which means adjusting the type of schools used, and building them close to where children live. Most out-of-school children live in rural areas. Unfortunately, few rural schools offer the complete primary cycle. A number of factors contribute to the incomplete-cycle phenomenon. The most significant is that the potential student population is insufficient for a three- or six-teacher school. Having children walk to school from neighboring villages also contributes to low enrollment and low student-teacher ratios. Since teachers generally do not teach more than 1 or 2 grades at a time in a classroom, rural communities usually have low student-teacher ratios, and education system administrators cannot justify sending additional teachers to the school. In addition, schools with incomplete cycles tend to have extremely low survival rates.
format Publications & Research :: Brief
author Lehman, Douglas
author_facet Lehman, Douglas
author_sort Lehman, Douglas
title Bringing the School to the Children : Shortening the Path to EFA
title_short Bringing the School to the Children : Shortening the Path to EFA
title_full Bringing the School to the Children : Shortening the Path to EFA
title_fullStr Bringing the School to the Children : Shortening the Path to EFA
title_full_unstemmed Bringing the School to the Children : Shortening the Path to EFA
title_sort bringing the school to the children : shortening the path to efa
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/08/2535411/bringing-school-children-shortening-path-efa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10377
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