女童大规模教育

IF 8.7 1区 经济学 Q1 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
David K. Evans, Amina Mendez Acosta, Fei Yuan
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在女孩面临教育优势的环境中,许多教育干预措施都能提高女孩的成绩,但其中哪些干预措施被证明能大规模有效发挥作用?与早期的审查相比,这项审查侧重于大规模的计划和政策,即那些惠及至少10000名学生的计划和策略,以及学业完成和学生学习等最终学校成绩,而不是入学和出勤等中等学校成绩。促进多个国家大规模完成学业或学习的计划和政策包括取消学费、学校伙食、让学校更容易进入以及提高教育质量。其他干预措施,如为女孩提供更好的卫生设施或安全空间,显示出有希望的结果,但在各个环境中证据有限,或者在评估中侧重于中等教育成果(如入学)或教育后成果(如收入)。这些和其他证据有限或没有证据的领域表明,教育领导者、合作伙伴和研究人员有很多机会继续大规模创新和测试项目。我们讨论了将循证解决方案纳入地方教育政策的三个考虑因素——对女孩教育的限制、潜在的解决方案和项目成本——以及有效扩大项目的经验教训。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Girls’ Education at Scale
Many educational interventions boost outcomes for girls in settings where girls face educational advantages, but which of those interventions are proven to function effectively at large scale? In contrast to earlier reviews, this review focuses on large-scale programs and policies—those that reach at least 10,000 students—and on final school outcomes such as completion and student learning rather than intermediate school outcomes such as enrollment and attendance. Programs and policies that have boosted school completion or learning at scale across multiple countries include school fee elimination, school meals, making schools more physically accessible, and improving the quality of pedagogy. Other interventions, such as providing better sanitation facilities or safe spaces for girls, show promising results but either have limited evidence across settings or focus on intermediate educational outcomes (such as enrollment) or post-educational outcomes (such as income earning) in their evaluations. These and other areas with limited or no evidence demonstrate many opportunities for education leaders, partners, and researchers to continue innovating and testing programs at scale. We discuss three considerations for incorporating evidence-based solutions into local education policies—constraints to girls’ education, potential solutions, and program costs—as well as lessons for scaling programs effectively.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
12.60
自引率
1.20%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The World Bank Journals, including the Research Observer, boast the largest circulation among economics titles. The Research Observer is distributed freely to over 9,100 subscribers in non-OECD countries. Geared towards informing nonspecialist readers about research within and outside the Bank, it covers areas of economics relevant for development policy. Intended for policymakers, project officers, journalists, and educators, its surveys and overviews require only minimal background in economic analysis. Articles are not sent to referees but are assessed and approved by the Editorial Board, including distinguished economists from outside the Bank. The Observer has around 1,500 subscribers in OECD countries and nearly 10,000 subscribers in developing countries.
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