Research Master HGPL Research questions, methodological approach and main findings 14-02-2022 final presentation René Vermeulen 1 Final presentation
02-05-2023 1
Research Master HGPL
Research questions, methodological approach and main findings
final presentation René Vermeulen
Final presentation
02-05-2023 2
Introduction Research questions Methodology Main findings Conclusion
final presentation René Vermeulen
Content
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An examination of the constructs of implementation process of the Thematic Curriculum in Uganda and an analysis of the factors that support or hinder the teachers’ and students’ capabilities in rural public primary schools by using a School Development Index
Introduction
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An examination of the constructs of implementation process of the Thematic Curriculum in Uganda and an analysis of the factors that support or hinder the teachers’ and students’ capabilities in rural public primary schools by using a School Development Index
Introduction
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Millennium Development Goals Introduction of Free Primary Education in Uganda in 1997 enrolment more than doubled quality of education under pressure
In general, rural education is worse off than urban education quality is lower and additional barriers hinder teaching and learning
analyse these barriers beyond standard quality indicators
Traditional indicators of quality of education [inputs and outcomes] do not take the context [rural] into account
Capability Approach to Education School Development Index [SDI]
Introduction new primary curriculum in Uganda in 2007 aims at increasing quality of education
Theoretical assumptions
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Conceptual Model
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The aim:
This research aims at determining the success of the introduction of the Thematic Curriculum in Uganda as a quality improvement intervention. The level of success will be established on the basis of utilising a Capability Approach School Development Index beyond the standard education quality indicators in rural government primary schools.
Research questions:
1. Which preconditions [outside support, innovative capacity and practices] for successful implementation of the curriculum are (not) met in Uganda and to what extent does that hinder or support improvement of the quality of education?
2. To what extent do the education quality indicators represent the needs and the required capabilities of government primary school teachers and students in rural areas?
3. Which other barriers exist in rural areas that obstruct teachers’ and students’ capabilities?
Aim and research questions
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1. Desk research2. In-depth semi-structured interviews3. Group discussion and observation reports
3 months in Uganda; 10-day fieldwork in Namasale Sub-County (4 out of 10 government primary schools)
Methodology [1]
Interviews 35
Ministry of Education and Sports and affiliated 9
NGOs and other development partners 13
District officials Amolatar District 5
Head teachers in Primary schools in Namasale 4
Community Namasale 4
Group discussions (head-)teachers & students 5
Observation reports in schools and community 8
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Additional secondary data:◦ DevEd participatory assessment in July 2012.
3 primary schools 434 respondents
Methodology [2]
Respondents per Gender M=291 F=143 434
Head teachers in Primary schools in Namasale 8 0 8
Teachers in Primary schools 23 10 33
Pupils/learners of primary 6 and 7 130 85 215
Community 128 45 173
District officials 6 3 9
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Findings
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Main findings [1.1] Constructs of implementation and quality of
education• Profile of implementation good in theory, bad in practice:
– Coverage of learning areas > focus on literacy, numeracy & life skills– Language of instruction > PROBLEM!– Classroom interactions > still a lot of rote teaching– Assessment practices > Continuous assessment misunderstood & exam-oriented teaching
• Capacity factors: – Physical resources > lacking and in bad condition– School ethos and management > SMCs, but still in development– Teacher factors > low motivation, underpaid, little training– Student factors > low motivation, little parental support, NO FOOD!
• Support from outside agencies:– Teacher professional development > little to none. CCTs not able to provide in-service
training. – Provision of physical resources > Problem!! Buildings are in bad condition and learning
materials absent.– Monitoring > monitoring and inspection is failing
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Main findings[1.2] Constructs of implementation and quality of
educationInput indicators:
- Teacher’s capacity: little training, low motivation, not enough resources
Ratio 1999 2009/10/11Enrolment 3.1 million [1996]
6.3 million [1999]8.1 million
Drop out 61.8% 68.2%PTR Uganda 57:1 49:1PTR Northern R. - 90:1Survival to P5 57% 57%Survival to P7 38% 32%
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Constructs of implementation and quality of education
Outcome indicators % proficiency in:
◦ Literacy [English] ◦ Numeracy ◦ Oral reading
Main findings [1.3]
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[1.4] Literacy [English]
Oral reading
Numeracy
Uganda
2007 2008 2009 2010 20110
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
P3 boysP3 girlsP3 allP6 boysP6 girls
2007 2008 2009 2010 20110
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
P3 boysP3 girlsP3 allP6 boysP6 girlsP6 all
2003 2007 201105
101520253035404550
P3 boysP3 girlsP3 all
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Findings
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Main findings [2.1] Education quality indicators and capabilities
in rural areas Amolatar District: *official numbers can differ from actual situation
*note difference between NAPE and Uwezo
Enrolment 2011
P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6 P7 Total
Male 3,618 2,676 2,897 3,260 3,145 2,659 1,551 19,806Female 3,430 2,866 2,985 3,448 3,377 2,565 1,039 19,710
Average drop-out rate 59%
Boys' drop-out rate 53%
Girls' drop-out rate 68%
Uwezo Report 2011 Amolatar District UgandaCompetence in English 15.0% 34.3%Competence in Maths 41.8% 51.1%Competence in Both 10.2% 27.7%
NAPE test 2011 Amolatar
Uganda
P3 numeracy 47% 63%P3 literacy in English
26% 47.9%
P3 oral reading 15% 46.2%P6 numeracy 11% 41.3%P6 literacy 12% 45.6%
Namasale
Amolatar
Uganda
PTR 66:1 62.5:1 49:1
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Vermeulen
Main findings [2.2] Education quality indicators and capabilities
in rural areas
Adapted from Tao 2010
Capabilities
1. Basic survival capabilities
2. Mental well-being, bodily integrity, social networks, respect and recognition, voice, freedom to act and freedom to aspire3. Having a well-managed school with adequate resources4. Teacher capability to manage a class
5. Teacher capability of accessing in-service training
6. Teach capability of being adequately remunerated
7. Student capability of parental support8. Student capability of accessing appropriate pedagogies
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Interpretation SDI [2.3]
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Interpretation SDI [2.4]
Teachers’ capabilitiesStudents’ capabilities
Teachers’ and students’ capabilities
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Findings
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Main findings [3] Additional barriers in rural areas
◦ Additional barriers poverty, commuting distances, poor living conditions, gender bias poor educational facilities
◦ Decentralized education system provision of learning materials, teachers’ salary, the construction of classrooms and sanitation facilities, the accessibility of in-service teacher training Insufficient inspection/monitoring corruption
◦ Limited support by parents.
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Preconditions for successful implementation of the Thematic Curriculum are not sufficiently present in Uganda.
The inputs and outcomes show that the quality of education in Uganda is low.
The SDI shows that the indicators fundamental to the low quality of education are inadequately taken into account and are insufficiently provided for.
Several additional barriers that hinder the educational performance in the rural area of Namasale are understood.
Conclusion
Thank you