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Shadow education in Myanmar: private supplementary tutoring and its policy implications

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Abstract

This book presents the first detailed empirical study in Myanmar of a phenomenon that is of increasing visibility and significance in high-, medium- and low-income countries across the world. Private supplementary tutoring is widely called shadow education because it reflects curriculum changes in schools. Among the students sampled for this study, over 80% were receiving shadow education; and among the teachers sampled, nearly half were providers. Other tutoring was received from informal providers and through registered companies. The study exposes the significance of this phenomenon for the lives of students, the work of teachers, and the broader society. It has far-reaching implications for the educational reforms on which the Myanmar government has embarked. The study also has much of interest for international comparative analysis.

Author
Bray, Mark
Kobakhidze, Magda Nutsa
Kwo, Ora
Corporate Author
UNESCO
University of Hong Kong (China). Comparative Education Research Centre(CERC)
Year of publication
2020
Imprint
Hong Kong (UNESCO Chair in Comparative Education, 2020, p.158)
Country (Geographical area)
ISBN
978-92-9223-649-6 (eng, UNESCO); 978-988-14241-8-1 (eng, Co-Publisher); 978-92-9223-657-1 (bur, UNESCO)
Source database
curatED
Language