Implications of Environmental Chores for Schooling: Children's Time Fetching Water and Firewood in Tanzania.

Deborah Levison, Deborah S DeGraff, Esther W Dungumaro
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引用次数: 31

Abstract

In many developing countries, children devote substantial time to collecting firewood and fetching water. Is there a connection between such time-consuming work and children's schooling? If so, environmental degradation may have serious detrimental implications for children's education. To explore this question, this case study set in rural Tanzania uses evidence collected from children and their mothers about children's environmental chores. Although the sample is small, we find some descriptive quantitative evidence as well as qualitative evidence from focus groups with children supporting such a link, consistent with results from the few econometric analyses set in Africa. We also document substantial demands by schools for students to fetch water. The proposed conceptual framework takes into account confounding factors including school-related violence, which affected more than one-third of children in this study. We make a case for future research based on larger data collection projects designed to explore these issues more fully.

Abstract Image

环境杂务对学校教育的影响:坦桑尼亚儿童取水和柴火的时间。
在许多发展中国家,儿童花大量时间拾柴打水。这种耗时的工作和孩子的学业之间有联系吗?如果是这样,环境退化可能对儿童教育产生严重的不利影响。为了探讨这个问题,本案例研究以坦桑尼亚农村为背景,使用了从儿童及其母亲那里收集的关于儿童环境杂务的证据。虽然样本很小,但我们从有儿童的焦点小组中发现了一些支持这种联系的描述性定量证据和定性证据,这与在非洲进行的少数计量经济学分析的结果一致。我们还记录了学校对学生取水的大量需求。拟议的概念框架考虑了包括学校暴力在内的混杂因素,在这项研究中,学校暴力影响了超过三分之一的儿童。我们提出了一个基于更大的数据收集项目的未来研究案例,旨在更充分地探索这些问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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