1 / 15

Role of Preschool Education on Later Learning: The Bangladesh Case

Role of Preschool Education on Later Learning: The Bangladesh Case. Samir Ranjan Nath Programme Head, Educational Research Unit, BRAC International ECCD Conference, 5–7 November 2012 The Sultan Hotel, Jakarta, Indonesia. Preschool education in Bangladesh.

lela
Download Presentation

Role of Preschool Education on Later Learning: The Bangladesh Case

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Role of Preschool Education on Later Learning:The Bangladesh Case Samir Ranjan Nath Programme Head, Educational Research Unit, BRAC International ECCD Conference, 5–7 November 2012 The Sultan Hotel, Jakarta, Indonesia

  2. Preschool education in Bangladesh • Preschool education is not compulsory but primary education is [for aged 6–10 years] • Preschool providers include • Formal schools where primary education is provided • Kindergartens and English medium schools • BRAC and other NGOs • Uses different curriculum with various duration • Mostly one year called ‘pre-primary’ • May vary from 1–4 years: PG, Nursery, KG I, KG II • Low enrolment rate; biased to well-off families

  3. Objective • Whether participation in preschool education in Bangladesh makes any difference to the learning achievement of the pupils at the end of primary education

  4. Methodology • Secondary analysis of Education Watch 2008 data • A paper-pencil test based on 27 terminal competencies adopted by NCTB • Primary school survey containing information on schools and teachers • Household survey for pupils socioeconomic background information which also included whether the pupils received preschool education at their early age

  5. The sample • Six of the ten types of primary schools • Government primary school, Non-government primary school, Non-formal primary school, Ebtedayee madrasa, Primary attached high schools, Ebtedayee attached high madrasas • Intended to take test of 7200 pupils, who completed primary education in 2008, from 360 schools • Final sample included 7093 pupils from 440 schools

  6. The test instrument • Developed in 2000 for Education Watch • Included 27 national competencies focusing on five assessment areas, viz., Bangla, English, mathematics, social studies, general science and religious studies • Duration of test was 2h 10m with two intervals of 10m each • Internally and externally valid • The test as a whole, as well as by school type, was more than 90% reliable

  7. Fieldwork • Trained research assistants collected all data • 20 teams worked, each contained two • Tests were taken in group in the classrooms • Head teachers provided information on schools and teachers in their offices; one or two teachers assisted each of them • Parents were interviewed for background information visiting them at homes

  8. Percentage of pupils participated in preschool education • Total: 15.3% with no gender difference • Urban: 21.8%, Rural: 13.5% • Urban-rural difference in non-government, high school and high madrasa

  9. Mean number of competencies achieved by the pupils • On average, the pupils achieved 18.7 of the 27 competencies under test • Boys did better than the girls • Urban pupils did better than their rural counterparts

  10. Preschool impact: bivariate analysis • Overall, p < 0.001 • By gender • Boys, p < 0.05 • Girls, p < 0.001 • By area • Rural, ns • Urban, p < 0.001

  11. Bivariate analysis by school type • Preschool participants of government school (p<0.05), high school (p<0.001) and high madrasa (p<0.01) did better in the test than the non-participants. No significant difference in non-government, non-formal and ebtedayee madrasa.

  12. Multivariate analysis • Eight regression models were built • All data together • Six separate models for six types of schools • Combined model for five types together • Dependent variable: Number of competencies achieved • 21 independent variables • Socioeconomic background (8) • Primary school-related factors (7) • Additional educational inputs (5) • Preschool participation (1)

  13. Results • Preschool participation had no impact on the primary school learning achievement of the pupils of five types of schools • Impact was only evident among the pupils of primary attached high schools • Overall, fathers education and receipt of private tuition were two important predictors of primary school learning achievement

  14. Limitations • Besides the socioeconomic background, explanatory variables mostly represent primary education not preschool. Variations in quality of preschool education may explain the issue better. • It was not possible to identify whether the impact was attributed to preschool or particular type of primary school • The study was highly quantitative. No insight into the views and experiences of the teachers, parents or pupils included.

  15. Thank You • Finally • There may be questions about curriculum, teachers quality and their preparation, overall environment at home and in school, school facilities and teaching-learning provisions in preschools [which needs to be improved] • A longitudinal study with a number of preschool variables along with a baseline of students achievement might explain the impact better.

More Related