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Evaluating strategies to improve children’s reading skills in Kenya. Study summary

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Abstract

Many students in Sub-Saharan Africa are not learning to read in their first years of school and literacy rates remain low in the region. Researchers partnered with the Kenyan Ministry of Education to evaluate the impact of two strategies aimed at improving the literacy skills of school children in Kenya: enhanced literacy instruction, through teacher training and text message support, and child-to-child reading groups. Results showed that the enhanced literacy instruction improved children’s reading skills in both Swahili and English and reduced the school dropout rate by 50 percent. The reading groups led to a small improvement in children’s attitudes about reading, but did not significantly improve their reading skills.

Author
Simmons Zuilkowski, Stephanie
Halliday, Katherine
Wolf, Sharon
Adelman, Elizabeth
Dubeck, Margaret
Turner, Elizabeth
Inyega, Hellen
Jukes, Matthew
Corporate Author
Innovations for Poverty Action (USA)
Year of publication
2016
Pages
4
Theme
Linguistic region
Country (Geographical area)
Level of education
Source database
library
Language